“Password cannot contain username”
“Password must contain digits”
“Password cannot contain reversed misspellings of predynastic Egyptian pharaohs”
And now…
“Password cannot contain JavaScript”
Sadly Microsoft didn’t specify where on the keyboard the key has to be.
In order to find out, hit the keyboard with your head; wherever your forehead touches the keyboard first is where the key is supposed to be.
I like how the reader is supposed to be familiar enough with the scream box that it doesn’t require any extra explanation.
Yeah, I deserve that. I’m just gonna leave my typo. Thanks for the laugh!
1024 = 210
FYFY
That sounds like uncontrolled dosages of Desoxyn.
I alternate
I have a dad joke, but it’s yo momma.
Those are different kinds of fine motor skills than used when writing cursive. Ideally kids should be exposed to both.
Cursive writing helps in developing fine motor skills.
This article is such a mess that I hope it was written by AI, otherwise I’d be worried about the author having a stroke right in the middle of it
I have an M1 Pro MacBook Pro and really like the fact that I can just plug in an HDMI cable without resorting to dongles. I don’t notice the extra weight. If you already know that you’re going to connect multiple monitors I’d say go for the M1 Pro.
Easy way to save on power.
Apparently this is what makes someone turn neutral.
A non-recursive recursive descent parser isn’t any easier to reason about.
I had been thinking about doing something akin to the X16 but more modern, but realised that the main challenge with launching a product like this lies not in doing the design, but in coordinating all the people that are involved in producing the hardware, software and documentation (and hype, don’t forget hype). And you’ve gotta hand it to David Murray (the 8-bit guy): he’s knows how to do this, and has demonstrated this before with Planet X3.
It’s weird in the sense that software development has moved in other directions. A tagged-architecture stack machine like the Burroughs Large System is weird as well, even though it’s been highly successful and very influential on later designs (eg. Forth, SmallTalk).
If we’d still be using bank switching and overlays I’d say learning to code assembly on a 6502 is a great introduction to modern computers, but we’re not so it’s not.
Ah good. Now I know what specs not to buy.