Darkassassin07
Lmao, because they've been so successful with browsers...
Your scrotum looks displeased...
"I'm going to retaliate against your retaliation for retaliating against a retaliators retaliations! I warn you against retaliating further, or there will be retaliations!"
A criminal trial against a former president is the unprecedented bit.
Tbh that's worse.
Willfully violating protocol and allowing live ammo to be near, let alone loaded into, the prop gun. That makes them even more culpable.
I'd say the bigger issue is opening the doors being dependant on a computer.
The manual and electronic releases should work together interchangeably. (ie using the manual release should have no ability to damage the door...)
Na, pretty much anything that'll run linux will do.
Seriously, expect a bill and/or permanently cutoff service when it is discovered.
That's gonna be quite the bill when the device does eventually disconnect...
I'd expect it to bill you for the extra data retroactively. (otherwise people would just save all the heavy downloads for the end of the month) I'd also expect it to calculate usage regularly as well as upon disconnect, so this plan wouldn't really work.
If this is really what you want to try though: take a rpi, open a Screen for a persistent terminal, run 'ping google.com' and disconnect from that screen (leaving it to endlessly ping google, at least until it's restarted).
I think what OC was getting at was how some animal breeds are bred with very limited groups to maintain desired bloodlines/genes. This leads to health issues due to inbreeding.
Pug dogs are a somewhat common example; same with a lot of 'pure bred' dog breeds.
I'm not sure how much that applies to sphinx cats.
With a quick search, this comes up:
https://faqcats.com/is-breeding-sphynx-cats-cruel/
It can be done ethically, with a sufficient gene pool. It can also be done cruelly; especially when profit is involved. I can't say I have much faith in it being done ethically... But I'm sure there are some alright groups out there.