That’s a very elaborate way to spell “leeches”.
That’s a very elaborate way to spell “leeches”.
They had that in the 80s, too.
I’m Spartacus!
That was always part of the enshittification formula. The final stage after exploiting users is to exploit business customers to the breaking point.
Gulf War: 1990-1991
Idiocracy: 2006
You may be thinking of the sequel, Gulf War II
Depends on what you’re looking for in FPS games, but Battlebit Remastered is a good time.
Hammerwatch II and Sea of Stars just in the past few weeks. En Garde not far off. The hardest part of gaming is finding the time.
Viewing the images directly sounds to me like a different context. Browsing the images is more akin to end user activity, i.e. using the server for its intended purpose. Managing the server is more like making sure it’s running, that there is enough space allocated, security holes are plugged, software is up-to-date, etc. Administrative tasks. When wearing the admin hat, there wouldn’t usually be much of a need to actually look at the photos - you’d be more concerned with file names and metadata, not contents. In that context, the GUI becomes less important. And if you ever do need to see them, you can always fire up the GUI software for that occasional situation.
Having read it, this is basically correct. The last hurdle was that the sewer system was designed to use the river to dump overflow in the case of heavy rains. Now they’re finishing up a large reservoir to use instead.
You wouldn’t download a meme.
More of a duck than a goose, but I think the sentiment applies: https://youtu.be/4JudTGMp4Yw
I could have sworn I read about it shutting down years ago. Did someone bring it back up, or am I just mistaken?
Came for the decentralization, stayed for the nonconsensual lemon party redirects.
That’s the neat part, you don’t!
I even got an error page the first time I tried to load this post. Just like old times! 🥲
Same here, apparently. And I just made this account a few minutes ago, too. Got me already…
Don’t know about Teamspeak, but you never HAD to pay for Mumble. You could just run the server on any machine you wanted, including the same one as your client.
I assume you still can, for that matter.