Same process in the United States
TheOneCurly
There are quite a few creators who are primarily funded off patreon and release content to YouTube. I imagine a group like MCDM (Matt Colville) who has patreon, merch, crowdfunding, and products doesn't really care about ad revenue.
I disagree. Each distro is a user of a thousand different open source systems. When a distro developer integrates gnome, systemd, bluez, or whatever other system they're finding, reporting, and possibly fixing bugs that end users might miss. Other than arch users, who else is compiling these things from scratch and really digging into the documentation?
All I meant by this is that there is a common fantasy that the dragonborn race option fulfills that is not thematically fulfilled by dwarves and orcs. If you think a different or custom race would fulfill that fantasy better then that's great too.
On top of the many other reasons here, there's also a pretty distinct difference between countries without a US extradition treaty and countries that won't extradite to the US. Many countries without formal treaties will still happily hand over a US citizen trying to hide in their country. It might be a different story if he had dual citizenship somewhere but anywhere he tried to flee he'd be immigrating illegally.
It's only 100% efficient if you're also letting all the exhaust into the house too...
It covers the very common case of new players who want to be dragons. You point them at dragonborn and tell them to go to town.
No, modern cpus are really good at managing themselves. If you're not seeing crazy high temps then it should live out its natural life (which is possibly forever, I've never seen a cpu die without a really traumatic external factor).
A large portion of people on one side are looking to bring about a world ending apocalypse so they can be raptured. American evangelicals don't care about the world, and are ideologically incapable of civil debate and compromise. When your side is god and the other side is the devil you can't possibly meet in the middle.
The headline gives a bad first impression but I think the text itself has an interesting point. As it stands right now (in the US) the AI gatekeepers can't copyright any of their output. So each and every piece of generated media is one more piece added to the public domain pile. Most of it is worthless but if there's anything worth building on someone or someones can do that.
Boston has a similar problem where the trains come above ground. They run in the center of a split street so they have to stop at traffic signals and are frequently struck by cars attempting to cross the intersection when they're not supposed to. What should be a fast and easy mode of transit is instead frequently derailed by traffic accidents.
Beer, fries, and waffles. Brussels is awesome.