Now, let's not exclude a great man like Frank from the conversat--AAAAUUGHHHH!!!
SatyrSack
Lemon, have you ever had a piragua? It's exactly like a snow cone, except they call it a piragua.
If you have to ask, the answer is yes.
Pringles, you're a dumbass.
It is an alternative YouTube client. YouTube Revanced is created by taking the official YouTube app and modifying it to add features and remove restrictions. On the other hand, apps like NewPipe, PipePipe, and Tubular are created from scratch by the community to make YouTube API calls and whatnot.
That is not going to stop Windows Recall from screenshotting the message once decrypted.
Does anyone have any go-to resources to help with scripting LibreOffice Calc? I do not need to convert Excel/VBA scripts for use with LibreOffice; I am fine writing things from scratch. But learning VBA at work was incredibly easy because I could just do a generic Internet search for what I want to do, and there would be a dozen different help posts and articles with detailed explanations and exact code to solve the problem with VBA. But on the LibreOffice Calc side, I cannot find much useful information, for either BASIC or Python.
I have heard that phrase countless times on 30 Rock and the Office, but never thought to look into what it was referencing
unofficial
You appear to be looking at their official website. Services tend to not advertise unofficial clients
am not going to wear a hair shirt
For anybody like me who was entirely confused by that sentence:
A hair shirt is a coarse garment intended to be worn next to the skin, keeping the wearer in a state of discomfort and constant awareness of the shirt's presence. Such garments were traditionally worn by some Christian religious orders, along with individuals who felt penitent about certain actions or their lifestyles. Their use is fairly limited in the modern era, but the term is often used metaphorically, which is why someone might refer to "wearing a hair shirt" when they perform some other act of self-imposed penitence.
Warning: illustrated diagram of the Bristol stool scale