I wonder if anyone has compiled any data like that to show who is going out of their way to break Linux compatibility. I'd love to avoid publishers and/or devs that specifically use such anti consumer tactics.
Yep, perfectly acceptable to be happy now, but do not let your guard down. The USA has done the same shit with trying to end civilian access to true encryption how many times?
I saw you mentioned mornonism in a separate comment, if it's in Utah, that makes it even better.
The most boring father's day greeting card you can find and a fiver.
Edit: actually, don't spend the money on him, send him an electronic greeting card, equally boring, and donate, in his name, to a charity he'd hate.
Depends on your definition of success. If you mean at removing drugs from wide availability, none. If you define success as making the prison industrial complex obscenely rich by locking away a new class of slaves and absolutely fucking ruining their lives, all of them.
Amusingly, this also seems to be the history of Palo Alto (see Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris)
That was one I didn't know about before. Someone in the UN, please make this happen. Maybe if China brought it to the general assembly.
Or hall effect sensors (Lenovo laptops use this, I have set them off a few times with magnetic watch band clasps)
I'm old enough to have played OG Star Craft, ~~v1.0.3~~ v1.05 on CD ROM on an AMD K6-2 with 64MB of RAM...where'd my ibuprofen go?
only 1-2 minutes
Cries in Nurburgring 24H layout.
You must watch this at least once. Of course, it's for the greater good.
Fred Hampton, he showed a generation how to build dual power and properly threaten the settler colonial governments of North America. Sadly, that government saw the threat to power he actually posed because he was so effective and they murdered him for it.