Lul, there was this too, for San Francisco’s BART.
Is this an EVE reference?
Yessuh. o7
I haven’t played in a while either, hah.
Less hackers in games?
Half of the people in Jita 4-4 disappear overnight.
Prosecutors, man.
Mfs think he Gene Hackman from Enemy of the State.
GNOME’s minimalist so not sure what else to show. Technically, I shouldn’t have icons on the desktop I guess.
I have the overview (forget the actual name) on super, which is similar to GNOME’s. And also have the virtual desktops set up to horizontal only with some similar keyboard-based shortcuts for switching.
I wanted to try the “one application per desktop” paradigm, which I did and didn’t really like it, so I went back to regular alt-tabbing + overview switching but left the layout alone.
Using KDE configured like GNOME.
KNOME, if you will.
Phuket
That’s what the contractor said, apparently.
shrug and close the case
Ruble in rubble
Narrator: The ship did not, in fact, return.
Sweden:
It looks goofy
You mean Daffy? 😏
The only successful one I can think of
What about when the Rebels first take control of the shield facility on Endor? Does that count? (They go loud eventually when they defend, of course).
Truer to form anyway. 😏
Or, now that they could identify the ship, “peng-peng-peng”.
Destroying evidence is a big no-no in a legal case, and would allow the judge to draw a negative inference, so I’m guessing that gave Valve the leverage to settle the case.
Ah, that would make sense. So Valve probably won more on procedural grounds then?
“Needle in a haystack” made me assume it was something like actual contractual language forbidding Vivendi from doing what it was trying to do.
In a bit of malicious compliance, Vivendi turned over millions of pages of Korean language documents from its local subsidiary during the discovery phase of Valve’s cybercafe lawsuit, with anything potentially useful to Valve buried under both the volume of material and a language barrier. Quackenbush turned to a summer intern identified only as “Andrew” in the documentary. A native Korean speaker who also majored in Korean language studies in college, Andrew found the needle in the haystack: An email where one Korean Vivendi executive discussed the destruction of documents related to the Valve case to their superior, with the implication that the more junior executive was ordered to do so. With this evidence in hand, Valve was able to turn the tables on Vivendi, securing a highly favorable settlement and full ownership of its IP moving forward.
It’s not clear to me how the email described was helpful though?
Have you tried recently?
You used to either have to install them manually, or enable the nVidia repo.
But I reinstalled Tumbleweed a few months ago and it auto-detected and added the repo for me and everything. I didn’t even have to disable nouveau first or anything like that, if I recall correctly.