Alas no. Sur-rip-tish-yis-ly. Apparently you can blame Latin for sub + rapere = "secret snatch".
addie
Not very easy, even then. Very pure water will absorb CO2 out of the air to make carbonates, it will strip ions from the surface of most materials you'd want a make a distillation column from. It's a very aggressive solvent.
We used to do that in industrial automation. If you make any changes to the PLC / HMI / SCADA software, burn a DVD with what you changed and leave it next to the rack. No danger of bringing in viruses on a USB stick (the whole system was air-gapped) and you'd still have a backup available.
I've always thought it was an otter, but never up till now have I questioned why it's stolen an orange. They're not the most citrus-loving of creatures.
Another fantastic project that makes gaming on Linux so much easier. It's incredibly strong in configurability and 'robustness'. Yes, you might have to set up all of your Wine bottles and things like that, which can be a faff, but once it's working in Lutris, it just keeps on working on Lutris.
Great for long-running series, too. I've been a big fan of the XCOM series since the Amiga days; in Lutris, it's easy to have UFO: Enemy Unknown / Terror from the Deep running in openxcom
, Apocalypse in DosBox, and connected up to the Firaxis remakes in Steam. Similarly, love me a metroidvania, and have got most of the 40+ CastleVania games lined up and ready-to-go, just a double-click away.
Heroic has made me start buying games on GOG again.
I used to dual boot "Windows for games" and "Linux for work", and would buy GOG in preference to Steam because I love what they do.
Got rid of Windows years ago because it's more of a PITA than it's worth, and basically went 100% Steam because Proton is so good.
Heroic is so awesome - better interface than Steam, in many ways - that GOG is back on the menu.
Awesome interview as well, @PerfectDark@lemmy.world - a really interesting read.
Well, we know that our understanding of physics isn't correct - galaxies rotate faster than we think they ought to based on the amount of matter that we think is in them based on our theories of gravity and the evolution of the universe.
The "simplest" explanation is that there's a particle that only interacts gravitationally, and has no other interaction with matter, hence being dark. Gravity might work differently on galactic scales, although it's hard to make that maths work; or neutrinos (which are also 'dark') don't have the gravitational interaction that we expect from theory.
Simple answer is that we don't know, and "dark matter" is the useful placeholder term until we work it out. Could be a lot of things, although there's a lot of things that we know it isn't.
Wikipedia has a big list of all the things that don't fit our current model, and which a proper theory of everything would have to explain. Dark matter ticks all the boxes, whereas other theories work for one or two but can't explain the rest.
You've got that a bit backwards. Integrated memory on a desktop computer is more "partitioned" than shared - there's a chunk for the CPU and a chunk for the GPU, and it's usually quite slow memory by the standards of graphics cards. The integrated memory on a console is completely shared, and very fast. The GPU works at its full speed, and the CPU is able to do a couple of things that are impossible to do with good performance on a desktop computer:
- load and manipulate models which are then directly accessible by the GPU. When loading models, there's no need to read them from disk into the CPU memory and then copy them onto the GPU - they're just loaded and accessible.
- manipulate the frame buffer using the CPU. Often used for tone mapping and things like that, and a nightmare for emulator writers. Something like RPCS3 emulating Dark Souls has to turn this off; a real PS3 can just read and adjust the output using the CPU with no frame hit, but a desktop would need to copy the frame from the GPU to main memory, adjust it, and copy it back, which would kill performance.
You say that, but elephants, which are the largest animal alive on land today, are surprisingly quiet. They've got very padded feet to support their enormous weight, which means they move very quietly.
Now, not seeing them? They were big bastards. Need some trees to hide in.
If you lose, physical scars. If you win, emotional scars.
This, exactly. When we redid our bathroom, we went from "immersion tank" hot water with about three metres of pressure behind it, to central heating in a closed system, where both hot and cold have the exact same pressure, about thirty metres head. Went from being basically impossible to have a shower, to being an absolute pleasure where nearly the entire range of the tap gives a useful temperature, and it's got a right blast of pressure behind it too.
Another alternative would be an electric shower - since you're just heating up cold water, the pressure is "always the same". They tend to be a bit pathetic and crap, tho.
English does have some very good bits:
...and some less good bits: