

Or we just sell anonymous age verified serial numbers at gas stations like prepaid phone cards.


Or we just sell anonymous age verified serial numbers at gas stations like prepaid phone cards.
It’s triple L rustic designs, and I did actually see the episode that is in that pic. From a quick google though, she wears that in every video.
Also, that shot was sponsored by Stihl… And they took it before they fixed the bar and chain lol.
That’s just straight up Unix, the mother of it all.


Yea, see that’s why a question like that has to come with qualifiers. Andrew Johnson was a democrat, but he was a conservative democrat from before the party flip.
He’d be a republican under the modern party ideals.


I like your idea, but I think a tankless water heater would save more energy, and in that case you don’t need hot water just sitting around.


Also if it’s even remotely compatible with steam deck then you can usually assume it’s at least playable on any linux distro.


You could easily code the game to do that, and it would be hilarious.
I think this might be the right solution for OP, especially since they don’t seem to have had the “experience” I’m sure many of us have had with this “simple” operation. If you are going to do it, them it should be done using a live OS and a full offline system backup, otherwise its very easy to lose a lot of data this way.
However, symlinks like that can make things confusing really quickly. I would encourage anyone using them in this way to establish some easily checked rules and abide by them. For example, maybe you only use symlinks like this in a specific folder such as /home/expanded. You can still have multiple links there like /home/expanded/on5TBdrive or /home/expanded/onPrimarySSD, but it makes it easier to remember, find, and check those locations later.
When you need to know exactly where something is stored, verify a backup, or find data without the symlink, then you will appreciate a set of rules that helps you.
I don’t have first hand experience, but I think NYC and possibly some other large US cities do actually operate on a steam network. It’s not a closed loop hot water system like I have in my house, from what I understand you purchase hot steam like you would buy electricity.
Take all of that with a grain of salt until someone that knows more can chime in.