A friend of mine worked on a fast food store that had an ice cream machine. And I’ll tell you: it happens more often than you think.
I found it easier than BotW. I died here and there, but I never thought any part was impossible to beat. I’m not a pro player, I’m a middle aged guy with a small family.
But in both games, combat is by far the worst thing in the game.
Maybe you didn’t upgrade your armors enough?
Because people buy the game anyway. So why stop?
I have never even heard my joycons vibrating unless they’re vibrating against a solid surface like a table or the floor.
I didn’t even know they released a Super Mario 3D World 2.
I remember I had to change a setting when using Windows. And it even showed me an “Are you sure?” dialog. It wasn’t that long ago. Is that not a thing anymore?
Only if you go into settings, disable the safety measures and change it. And some apps might break.
No, the default file path limit is 256 characters. And I don’t mean file name. Full file path.
People have been talking about the real problem from the beginning of the thread: small character limit on file paths.
Depending on the definition, loading a web page might me called an API, but that’s not what people mean when they talk about APIs.
Not because they care about the government. Because they care about hackers.
Creating encryption backdoors for the government means creating encryption backdoors for hackers. Because once encryption is weakened, it’s weakened.
Frogs are turning the elephants gay. Or something.
Reason number one: it’s a publicly traded American company.
It does, yes.
And since lots of people in the Fediverse support blocking popular competitors, like people in Mastodon talking about blocking/unfederating Threads, I’d say we’re making sure the Fediverse stays in obscurity forever. Never having a chance to become popular, never having a chance to convince people to leave proprietary platforms.
No link?
App link here, since OP didn’t deliver 😉 : https://apps.apple.com/us/app/memmy-for-lemmy/id6450204299
It’s a made-up story.
Mozilla gotta do something.
And based on their actions on recent years, that something is probably going to be: 1) firing more developers, and 2) increasing the compensation of their CEO.