How do you think early humans survived without water bottles? Did they just live next to water sources all the time?
Nick Podehl is such an amazing narrator. The voices and performance are amazing.I've been slowly getting through the Kel Kade books and the narration just makes it for me
The burden of proof lies with the person making the claim. Whether or not something is easily confirmable
An iterable is just something that can be iterated over, like range(10), or [1, 2, 3].A sequence on the other hand is a Collection that is reversible.https://docs.python.org/3/library/collections.abc.html#collections-abstract-base-classes
And less engagement with something likehttps://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/android/addon/reddit-direct-images/
Here is a photo of a literal Goth moth I found in my garden. The photo doesn't quite do it justice, it was much blacker in person
I suppose crash team racing would be considered retro now.I spent countless hours finding all the secret paths and shortcuts
My last job had us maintaining a system that used COBOL and JCL. That part was very fine. The COBOL was easy to read and understand. The most annoying thing was the coin flip in the 70s that led them to choose a Network Database over a relational one.Its essentially a giant linked list and there are a thousand reasons no one uses them today
Exactly. Paper straws are undoubtedly better for the environment but if they aren't cheaper to make I will eat my own ass