jacksampson
Jack Sampson
jacksampson

True, but there's still really no way us humans can do that. If we could, we'd really have to try.

Care to explain how that command works? I know /dev/zero is, like, empty space.

Slow clap.

Nowhere does it say it was just discovered.

This.

Steam can do that for you, buy it from the web and it'll start downloading.

It's an application and website that allows you to buy, download and play games, then it saves your progress and saves online so you can continue from any other computer.

They post censored pictures and screenshots that tell us little to nothing about him! HOW DARE THEY?

I think it is. I don't care if some gets into my random-tech-support-site password.

Neither did I. In hindsight, I came off a wee bit harsh. My bad.

The thing for me is, I have one password for websites that aren't that important. Websites that are important or could come back to bite me if they get hacked, like Email, Twitter, Battle.Net, Facebook, PayPal, my school's website, all get their own password that stem off of one password.

I can only imagine how awkwardly placed the bases of those mic stands are.

What about a laptop? I can't play Starcraft on my phone on the toilet, and those queues are long.

There was a History/Discovery show on it, I think Modern Marvels, and I remember them saying they put a sizable ledge around the edge of it.

As a student, you can't be more wrong about how often I change files. And, still, I fail how to see how online storage is ignorant and convenient. A local backup is for convenience, an off-site is for safety. Fires? Theft? Online storage is a great place for backups.

This reminds me of that virus (trojan? I can't remember) for OS X a few years ago that disguised itself as a porn viewer. Most OS X users back then (like most Android users now) didn't realize that they had become targets for viruses.

As a colorblind person, this won't help in the slightest. We don't need to know what color it is, we need to be able to differentiate it. I came across a menubar app for OS X that applied a filter that showed normal visioned people what we saw, and could correct for our vision. I can't remember the name now, though.

You know...

After reading these comments, I have deduced that people will bitch and moan, talk like they're going to leave, and keep using it reluctantly because the other social media websites are sub-par.

*Wooosh*