looks like purgatory
Having visited with family that "retired out to the country", I can tell you that it feels like purgatory as well.
looks like purgatory
Having visited with family that "retired out to the country", I can tell you that it feels like purgatory as well.
Possibly? Or maybe people will think twice about deadnaming you.
I mean, maybe if you bake a stone cold potato that was in the fridge and then cook it for two hours? But even then we're probably talking about a handful of minutes at the most.
Which ~~car company~~ bar did you say you work for?
A major one.
I was gonna say. Jenkins needs zero help. Just let him do his (final) thing.
I'd go looking for another mindflayer offering "spotless mind" services and pay to have those memories removed. Assuming they can be trusted, of course. The hard part being that they're still mindflayers.
spam del or f2 keys
Also, sometimes it's ins
, F1
, or F10
.
If you find yourself doing this a lot, and are okay with attending every reboot, some BIOS' can be configured to just always boot to the BIOS menu. Also, there's sometimes a configurable time-frame for when it listens for keystrokes.
Disclaimer: I have 30 years of doing battle with PC's that I'm sifting through here, so some of that's bound to be old advice.
I am not a lawyer.
I did some rapid web searches to dig in here because I was curious about how this might be abused. It turns out that is better worded than it would at first appear. I think the trick here is it depends on whose definition of "depressant, stimulant, narcotic" you go by.
For example, the CDC considers caffeine a stimulant, but the FDA says it's a "food additive". So there's no FDA schedule for caffeine, which means you also can't get a prescription for caffeine pills, nor pay for them through insurance. But that also means it's arguably not a drug or "stimulant" under this definition.
Meanwhile, alcohol labeling is handled by the FDA, but it looks like everything about the substance itself falls under the ATF (it's in the name after all). The ATF seems to take great care to not categorize alcohol as a depressant and goes out of its way to never call alcohol a "drug" (example). And, as it turns out, (Federally) alcohol is not a controlled substance.
Never understood the appeal honestly.
Same here. I spent about 30 minutes trying to play one (DoTA I think?) and figured out:
From this I could deduce:
I'm not knocking the genre as a whole, but this is not for me. It's too far outside my typical mode of gaming and is likely to just frustrate me more than anything else. I'm familiar with hard to play online games like Quake, TF2, and even Soldat. But those have small power systems that, even with gross imbalances, were still playable because there were usually only one or two scenarios you couldn't overcome. Adding more on every axis just sounds like a wildly unbalanced system where the skill curve isn't steep enough, costing a lot of time invested in bad strategies before you figure it all out.
No, but it's actually pretty close.
Cars: 40,990 people The agency estimates that 40,990 people died in motor vehicle traffic crashes in 2023, a decrease of about 3.6% as compared to 42,514 fatalities reported to have occurred in 2022. The fourth quarter of 2023 represents the seventh consecutive quarterly decline in fatalities beginning with the second quarter of 2022.Apr 1, 2024
NHTSA Releases 2022 Traffic Deaths, 2023 Early Estimates
Guns: 42,967 people In 2023, 42,967 people died in the United States from gun related injuries. Between 2010 and 2020, gun-related deaths rose by roughly 43%. Every day, on average, at least 327 people are shot across the US, including roughly. 115,552 are shot.Feb 14, 2024
Nearly 43000 died from gun violence in 2023: How to tell the ...
Don't give them any ideas!