

If you read the article, both points are addressed.
If you read the article, both points are addressed.
vbCrLf
It’s pretty nasty—loads from a 3rd party domain (termly.io) that is blocked by uBO, and I had to disable it to load at all. After that, it loads into an iframe with a src of https://app.termly.io/policy-viewer/iframe-content.html?policyUUID=97db19c6-7afc-444b-bd38-9a2ac329fcac which you can load directly and print. It still has all the user-select: none
css settings applied so you can’t highlight / copy / paste, but that’s easy enough to remove in the inspector.
I remember hearing a story of a UN or EU real-time translator working German to English suddenly stopping, the English listeners looking a bit confused, and after another 15 or 20 seconds of hearing the German speaker continue with still no translation, just heard a whispered “the verb, dammit, the verb!” through their headsets.
‘Get her!’–that was your whole plan?
You should read his wiki page–quite the rollercoaster from tax evasion, Wimbledon commentator, professional poker player, to prison.
Sometimes you can Ctrl+drag (which is copy) text to those annoying ‘repeat your email’ fields that won’t let you paste.
Sardines, olives, capers.
I honestly can’t remember the details, but I followed an Arch guide somewhere (probably the wiki). It definitely prompts me for passphrase on boot.
Lots of percussive maintenance going on around here, but one that sticks in my mind was testing some of the first 486DX PCs in 1990. One particular specimen from Compaq would only boot after hard power off by taking the lid off and tapping the CPU with a screwdriver. Worked fine after that.
Yes, but to do that they have to be decoded and handled. That’s basically what the commenter above was saying.
The original 6502 had many undocumented opcodes for this reason, and developers stated exploiting them for various reasons. The CMOS 65C02 redefined them to no-op. This has been going on a long time.
When I was 18 and in my first job, my boss and I installed the very first windows NT file servers for a major uk public sector organisation. They were all named after beers that we’d drunk on team nights out. We had Blacksheep, Tanglefoot, Snecklifter, and so on. They were in a test environment so it didn’t matter. Until they went into production…
That was over 30 years ago now, but I still usually resort to beers.
Remember having one of these at school in the late '70s / early '80s
I’ve used the web interface, Voyager, Mlem, Memmy, Thunder, and Avalon.
But Arctic is the slickest and closest to Apollo I’ve found.
It was a spirited attempt. About a 7.2 on the KenMometer.
Give Arctic a try. Just a little bit smoother and some great customisation options.
Arctic on iOS Closest to Apollo that I’ve found.
Have you tried Arctic?
This is the way.
Not yet…