Eat less sugar. What you are experiencing isn't true energy, it's the immediate boost sugar gives you. It's a high your body has become addicted to.
If you cut back on the amount of sugar, your body will adapt to the lower energy levels coming from burning fats. It's lower overall, but it's much more constant without the high highs and low lows. You'll feel much much better.
I would recommend looking into the cycles your body goes through. When you kick your body into a sugar burning cycle, it's rough to transition back to fat burning. It feels like you have no energy and are hungry for snacks. It's better to stay in the fat burning cycle for a longer time.
This is why I've personally had good success with intermittent fasting or something like one meal a day. I eat normally in the evening and can even have a snack after. During the night my body goes from burning sugar to burning fat, then the next day it's burning fat all day. A zero sugars diet wasn't for me, but other people have had good luck with it.
Just do some research and figure out what works for you, everybody is unique.
Well my first modem was. It was very slow and you used it by dialing the phone yourself and placing the receiver on the modem. This is called an acoustic coupler.
Later modems changed this by connecting directly to the outlet. This allowed for digital signals to be sent directly over the copper wires. This allows for much more bandwidth compared to just bleeping and blooping using audio. There were also in between variants which still used pure audio signals, but still connected directly to the outlet to improve signal quality.
My computer back then also had a tape deck and I would record data using the tape deck. This was also a pure audio based signal. So in theory you could use a regular old tape deck with regular old tapes. However I had a specialized tape deck, specifically made for the computer and special "data" tapes. Not sure if they actually worked better, but I had them so I used them.
I've been having a lot of fun with DS3 Seamless Co-op since it released recently.
It's so much fun to play these games with multiple people. And it was surprisingly stable. We've had a couple of crashes, but not worse at all. The only boss that was too bugged to play was Wolnir. Luckily it bugged out so hard it beat itself.
Alright I'm gonna need you to buy an older ThinkPad and then install Arch Linux on it. Then I need you to set some anime background, preferably uncomfortable close to hentai if possible. Then I'm going to need you to get some thigh high socks and put those on. Put your legs up on the desk and take a picture. Make sure something like neofetch is running, so people know you use Arch BTW.
For 1 year, up 45.59% (this is fucking crazy!)
For 5 years, up 625.30%
This is not normal for any stock, even if the company was doing good. But the company isn't doing good.
Their market share is small and hasn't grown in ways promised. The Cybertruck was a disaster, with almost no customers, only legal in some parts of the world (parts without proper regulations) and a bunch of delays and technical issues. Demand has been decreasing, even before Musks latest public Nazi shit. Revenue is down. There appears to have been fraud in the numbers they did report and those weren't good to start with. The whole promised future of self driving cars has turned out to be total BS and only the very strict anti-sue terms has saved them on this point. Other companies in the same space are doing better on all fronts.
Yet somehow the stock is worth more than the rest of the market they are in? It makes zero sense and you can bet your ass illegal shit has been done to get it to this point.
Musk has been begging people to please hold on to their stock. And if I know one thing, if the big shareholders start saying shit like that, sell immediately! It's a sign they are going to sell and you need to get out before all the money is gone.
This is often an exercise for beginning programmers, it's a very simple task that's easy to understand, but leaves enough room in the implementation to make it a good exercise.
Sometimes it's used as a test on job applications, which is total bullshit, it isn't a good test of someones actual skills as a software developer. Because of this it's become a bit of a joke on the internet.
Americans doing a GoFundMe is always funny to me. Like you clearly understand if you pool together money, you can make a big impact. For example when little Timmy needs a big operation and can't afford it, people can start a GoFundMe, everyone chips in a little bit of money and Timmy is covered. So if we scale that up a bit... NO, THAT'S COMMUNISM!
For people that don't know about this: If you want the unofficial Portal 3 check out Portal Reloaded. It's a crazy mod for Portal 2 with excellent puzzles, new mechanics and a really polished feel to it. It's probably as close as we are ever going to get to a Portal 3.
Well that's a very biased pool tho. Don't disagree with the general fact people were shorter in the past. But such a selected pool is a poor data point.
Smart, because spammers log which numbers have responded and put them on a hot list. Those hot lists get traded around, which will greatly increase the amount of spam you receive.
In my experience it will write three paragraphs about the mistake, what went wrong and how to fix it. Only to then output the exact same code, or very close to it, with the same bug. And once you get into that infinite loop, it's basically impossible to get out of it.
I've been using this for a while now and it's pretty good. For my watercooling it controls the fans and pump speed using liquidctl. Stuff plugged into the motherboard it controls directly.
However the connection between CoolerControl and liquidctl breaks all the damn time for some reason. With the latest update it's broken again. I haven't figured out exactly where the error is, because the error comes from liquidctl but I can't reproduce it using just liquidctl. So it's somewhere between CoolerControl (it's daemon) and liquidctl. Once I figure it out I'll post a bug report and it will be fixed soon I hope.
I wonder how much extra cpu load CoolerControl adds. Some manufacturer tools are known to be quite cpu intensive. I've seen the interval for CoolerControl be quite short, to react quickly to changes. But I think their clever way of splitting the UI from the actual control logic is very efficient. It probably means the cpu impact is minimal.
Eat less sugar. What you are experiencing isn't true energy, it's the immediate boost sugar gives you. It's a high your body has become addicted to.
If you cut back on the amount of sugar, your body will adapt to the lower energy levels coming from burning fats. It's lower overall, but it's much more constant without the high highs and low lows. You'll feel much much better.
I would recommend looking into the cycles your body goes through. When you kick your body into a sugar burning cycle, it's rough to transition back to fat burning. It feels like you have no energy and are hungry for snacks. It's better to stay in the fat burning cycle for a longer time.
This is why I've personally had good success with intermittent fasting or something like one meal a day. I eat normally in the evening and can even have a snack after. During the night my body goes from burning sugar to burning fat, then the next day it's burning fat all day. A zero sugars diet wasn't for me, but other people have had good luck with it.
Just do some research and figure out what works for you, everybody is unique.