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Great list! I would also add to this PCR, the technology that allowed us to map the human genome.
Great list! I would also add to this PCR, the technology that allowed us to map the human genome.
My GF in college made me a coffee and put in salt instead of sugar. Three Spoons Full!!! I spit it across the room…
Thanks that is super-helpful! There is also a Gigabyte option that is only moderately more expensive. I will check it out!
Did anyone read the phrase “fed up carpenter” and immediately think the was the second coming of Christ?
Librewolf is great. Secure and private by default. For compatibility it is nearly as good as Firefox.
A lot of good stuff here. The three things that are most notable for me are:
Notepadqq
Fsearch
Librewolf
How about a simple faraday shield for the key fob?
Where is part 1?
So your saying a guy who has 40 years of experience in lawmaking is good at lawmaking?
Allowing cookies for websites you are logged into makes sense. If you are going to login the site already knows who you are can track you, so you do not lose much with the exception. What I do for some sites like google services is access them from a separate browser.
So like philosopher kings?
Good question! After installing Emulators on my Steamdeck I realized it could run as a desktop. Also, I learned it was a rolling release. This seemed attractive to me, so I wanted to hear how mainstream this could be.
Sounds like the answer is not very. Some other good suggestions in this thread I might try, though.
Not anymore according to Wikipedia:
SteamOS, version 3.0. This new version is based upon Arch Linux with the KDE Plasma 5 desktop environment
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I used to read only physical books, but when I got into audiobooks I noticed I had a digital trail of the books I was reading. I started to recording them in a spreadsheet. Eventually I was able to bring that into Goodreads as a way to get algorithmic recommendations based on past reading habits. I do not see that works very well, however. Bookwyrm seems to work differently. It is more of a social network and it helps you find new books to read by finding other readers with similar interests to yourself.
I am just getting started myself. I have been tracking my reading with a spreadsheet and I was able to bring my data in. I like the way it organizes and tracks the books I read. But it seems to me one of the core features is connecting with other readers to help find new things to read, so I am trying to find some well connected nodes as a hopping off point.
Who are some people to follow on Bookwyrm?
Does it support offline access?
“ …ways you can organize a business that makes literally impossible to legally do these things. ”
Not disputing this is true, but could you provide some examples?
Yeah, but the question is who else. Any suggestions?