On one hand, it's Trump and Republicans and they're gross. But it would be a bigger deal if they somehow skipped the 13th and 19th in a more purposeful way. Only including the original Bill of Rights in stuff like this isn't an uncommon thing.
Although funny note, the 27th Amendment was actually proposed with the rest of the bill of rights, alongside another unratified amendment that would have pre-empted the problems we have in the House of Representatives caused by the Permanent Apportionment Act of 1929.
Nah it didn't have an extra chip -- but large portions of the game were written in microcode for the N64's processor specifically. It's part of what makes it and Rogue Squadron kind of a pain to emulate -- along with using their own audio drivers (MoSYS/MusyX that were later used as the basis for the GameCube sound systems).
IIRC there was an official Windows port at some point though. Not sure how well it worked or works on modern systems.
In Geekbench, yes. From other reporting I've seen the major improvements here are from Scalable Matrix Extensions being on the M4, which Geekbench supports. Real world performance of which would be limited to certain scenarios and require application support for SME.
Veto power exists in the Security Council, not in the General Assembly. Unfortunately in this case, admission requires the Security Council to recommend a member be approved before the General Assembly can hold a vote.
The immediate pressing concern is to stop the fighting and get aid in to alleviate the famine and other humanitarian concerns. You can't hold an election while over half your population is displaced and homeless with tens of thousands wounded and a famine. The situation needs to be stabilized, and there is going to have to be some external party there to enforce the peace and start that work. Some of the proposals involve a regional peacekeeping force from Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, etc
As a party engaged in the fighting, if you want it to stop you're going to have to be discussing and coming to agreements with Hamas. But yes, in the longer term there should be free and fair elections in Gaza and the whole of Palestinian territory. But that's steps down the road, for sure.
The alternative is to continue on the path we're on. Sure, you might destroy Hamas as an organization, but you will have either created the breeding ground for much worse to come in the future, or gone all-in on genocide.
The only way to an actual peace in the region is starting to take steps towards the long term. As distasteful as it may seem it likely includes giving Hamas at least some measure of a seat at the table in the process.
"I get what I want, you get a months reprieve before I kill you." is not a serious proposal to end this.
The far reaching parts of the proposal involve steps to actually break the cycle and ultimately get to a two state solution. Israel doesn't actually want a real two state solution, so of course they're going to reject it.
HTC had Blinkfeed for a while which was kind of similar to People Hub. It probably wouldn't even be feasible these days as so many services have put their APIs behind paywalls.
If true that's an encouraging development, but I'm withholding judgement until it's confirmed as true and the reasons behind it are revealed. Whether it's part of a larger message about offensive aid in relation to Israel continuing to signal an imminent large ground invasion of Rafah, or one of the baby steps of sanctioning individual military units, or if it's just some logistical holdup.
If it's anything but the latter the administration really needs to work on their public messaging. Even if you're playing hardball behind the scenes to reduce harm, continuing with the public line of "We support whatever Israel does 100% of the time every time." makes anything else ring hollow.
Bachmann, Santorum, Huckabee, and Cruz are the Presidential campaigns she worked for. What an uninspiring career.