Similar to how more people have heard of Lockerbie than any other Scottish town of 5000 people.
Similar to how more people have heard of Lockerbie than any other Scottish town of 5000 people.
Similar with “get up, Trinity” from The Matrix’s opening scene.
Pair of marines turn up with a VPN key in a diplomatic bag.
The standard protocol for friends list and “who’s online” would be https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMPP
Like https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_Interactive_Simulation or you mean the match-making protocol?
Your last example reminds me of someone editing Wikipedia to list Ronnie O’Sullivan as the winner of the World Open, about 20 minutes before the final match finished.
They were right, and anyone would agree that it was all-but-certain, but it hadn’t actually happened yet.
This computer.
That was so insane - “we need a unique number, let’s just use the MAC” - it was like people didn’t even think through any of the implications when making ipv6 address schemes.
Similar with the address proposals that ignored the need to minimise the size of core internet routing tables.
Substitute Chaos Bringer to really give everyone flashbacks
Main menu theme, Myth II Soulblighter
Today you, tomorrow me
Satisfactory.
The good news is that everyone is going to be experiencing that for the first time again in about a week’s time!
Thomas Midgley Jr. (leaded petrol, CFCs, lots of deaths at the “ethyl” factory)
Wikipedia can also be useful to find software - e.g.:
or look at the Wikipedia page for whatever you want to replace and see if it’s in a category such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Audio_editing_software_for_Linux
You can even do this with things that aren’t software, e.g. Homebase -> UK home improvement stores -> Screwfix.
It might be a trope by now, but when you mention “rich tourists and digital nomads”… have you read For The Win?
When Cory Doctorow considers this question, … His character, an archetype of the subcultures you mention, from nearly fifteen years ago, voiced by the most cyberpunk author you ever read, chooses a cargo ship.
Looks like the main options are the things you’ve already ruled-out:
Maybe you can find a “tall ship” that’s big enough to have passive passengers (example), or pay the small boat to bring a higher ratio of paid crew to let the passengers sleep.
… except they ask you for a photo in the other direction, showing your chair and desk and keyboard. And not by surprise, just “send us a picture sometime for the audit.”
Seen in a code review (paraphrased):
“Why does this break when you add comments in the middle?”