I get so drunk I don’t know who I’m voting for!
I get so drunk I don’t know who I’m voting for!
With Internet searching disabled, the start menu is decent enough as a quick launcher and so I find myself hitting the Windows key quite often for that purpose.
On Linux there are better launchers that I’m too lazy to set up so still just hit Super and use the Application Launcher to find and run programs.
Pizza Hut has a program called “BOOK IT!” which many classrooms across the country enrolled in. Teachers (or Parents over the summer or in cases of homeschool) can set a reading goal for the student and, when they reach it, can award them a coupon for a free personal pan pizza
I tried for about a week: reading documentation, viewing and modifying example programs, using a Rust IDE with warnings for all my silly mistakes, the works. I couldn’t manage to wrap my head around it. It’s so different from what I’m used to. If I could dedicate like a month to learn it I would, but I don’t have the time :/
Yeah! Here’s their GitHub
SuperTuxKart and Mindustry are so much fun!
From what I understand you always want to keep accidentals as close to their note as you can to decrease chances to misread the notation.
This was a reference to an older Jay Foreman video on this topic, wasn’t found as funny as I’d hoped.
In all seriousness I look up candidates and try to find several sources discussing them to attempt to avoid biases from one source. I like to see how they’ve voted as a representative in the past (if they were one). For voting on propositions I will look up what it does, the supporting and critical arguments, and then who supports and who doesn’t support it. That’s usually how I go about it.