Because their cars lacked an immobilizer, which most other manufacturers have included as standard for a long time (and Kia and Hyundai only stopped using them recently). Some countries require them in new cars as well.
High frequency hearing loss is associated with decreased intelligibility, and some of the harder situations to discern people is in a group or noisy environment.
I had a fairly rapid decrease in my high frequency hearing (basically my ears aged 20 years in a few months), and the biggest indicator to me was how much harder it was to understand dialogue in loud shows. I was turning on subtitles and/or turning the volume up where before I was fine with a fairly quiet volume.
Many states in the US allow private citizens to start prosecutions that then get passed to a public prosecutor; some also allow private citizens to attempt to convince a magistrate to issue arrest warrants. There are also a few that allow private citizens to try a complete case (ex: Virginia). It’s rare, and not allowed for federal cases, but is a thing in the US.
> There was a time when Apple has email mailing lists. Here is the MAE User list. And Apple published the archives for people to search. I tell ya. Was a different time at Apple.
Rust links glibc dynamically, and can use musl for some platforms. By default most (all?) of the musl targets are linked statically, but they should be able to use dynamic linking for it as well.
Integrating accessibility into the tutorial is fantastic, but I’d also attribute it to Apple emphasizing accessibility in their developer documentation for a long time. I remember one of the early Interface Builder tutorials explaining accessibility pretty early on.
Depending on your DHCP and DNS servers, they might already have this built in. dnsmasq will maintain DNS entries for the DHCP leases it hands out, and can also add AAAA records if it sees a SLAAC message for a MAC address it gave a DHCP lease to. BIND’s servers (dhcpd, named, kea) can be set up so that for each DHCP lease assigned, a DDNS update is sent.
The easiest way to perform the flash is by booting into Raspbian and performing the process interactively. Without this one-time process, you can't netboot, as the default setting is the SD card, then USB: https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/computers/raspberr...
Echoing a sibling comment, that thread goes down the conspiracy rabbit hole very quickly. A few inaccuracies I noticed before giving up:
* "Remember, only 13 deaths out of the 36 passengers on the airship died." This skips the crew deaths (who also died at about the same rate).
* There were a bunch of photographers present at Lakehurst as it was the first crossing of 1937. The audio recording was not scripted, the original disc records a pressure wave which is followed by Morrison exclaiming that the Hindenburg is on fire.
* "Mary Jane" can be a real person's name.
* "Hugo Eckener, former head of the Zeppelin Company, Charles Rosendahl, commander of the Naval Air Station at Lakehurst, Max Pruss, captain of the Hindenburg and most of the surviving crew believed the airship had been sabotaged.". Eckener stated that it could be sabotage when he was first told the Hindenburg had gone down. He later backed the static spark theory.
Debian uses PGP signing pretty extensively, and maintain a keyserver (and separate search interface I used for this) for their keys: https://keyring.debian.org/
I feel the issue in this case is more a tablet being used to record a show versus a phone. The larger tablet blocks more of the view of people behind you. This does kind of fall apart with the blurred distinction between large phones and small tablets though, so in this case I feel like their decision was the right way to go (in addition to the other issues like false positives, complexity, etc).
Not a one-liner by itself, but sticking pbcopy/pbpaste into a pipeline is great for quick text processing. Wish you had regency support in a text field? `pbpaste | sed s/needle/NEEDLE/g | pbcopy`
Ugh, I've been using a datasheet from Panasonic [0] recently, and it's been a trip. The original Japanese is all there, with a lackluster English translation below each paragraph. Plugging the Japanese in to Google Translate for the particularly bad sections usually helps. At least this version is clean, I ran across a few PDFs floating around for this part that looked like they had been run though the print-scan-jpeg cycle a few times.