No it was just the end of the elephant, the series goes on for a few more episodes
</darkjoke>
No it was just the end of the elephant, the series goes on for a few more episodes
</darkjoke>
Yeah, that’s gonna be a ‘no’ from me, dog.
His videos have some good points but damn I hate his aloof presentation style.
What a dumbass.
Meanwhile Liam looks pretty much exactly the same.
Best movie soundtrack ever.
FYI, in theaters in November for a couple days. Maybe it’s at a theater near you! I bought my tickets a month ago lol. Love the movie.
Thanks, TheDude! Hope all goes well and you’re able to relax and enjoy your Friday night!
I wasn’t complaining, just annoyed with the (I guess now old) rules for sharing and the limitations it imposed. Not enough to stop buying games, though. I’ve been on Steam a long time and have a large library of games. We just got used to taking turns playing. Happy to see that change.
That’s awesome; I didn’t know they changed that. I haven’t tried to play multiple games from the same library for a long time now because I hadn’t heard about that restriction changing. Thanks!
omg yes
I hope this is better than the current implementation. The current “any user playing any game means the entire library is unavailable” is dumb. Going to go read the fine print!
That’s just a straight-shooter that’s got management written all over him!
Because it’s not, in my opinion.
Linux has standards, but virtually none of them are all-encompassing across all the installs. For example: Which distribution? Which desktop manager? Which package manager? Which kernel version?
A Windows install at one location looks and feels — and has the same code and dependencies and is compatible with the same installs and management functions — as any other location, barring specific policy considerations. Same for macOS. Not for Linux.
One can build a Linux standard for their environment, yes; but in my opinion considering Linux itself as “standardized” just isn’t there.
Assuming you mean bottom right… https://youtu.be/mLyOj_QD4a4
It’s complex yet very simple. Can be played by a small or large group easily. Teaches logic, reasoning, and deduction over “outscoring” your opponent. Being the dealer doesn’t give you any advantages if you play it right. And because of all the various permutations of the cards, it’s always a new game each time vs a number of set scenarios/strategies.
Clue.
I never had the cassette, but I had a friend that did and it was pretty sweet.
LOAD “*”,8,1
Elaborate death traps for my enemies.