If everything on the machine is owned by root and does not provide global read or execute permissions then a new user would not be able to access it without being in the root group. Assuming the files have group permissions set at all anyways.
As it should be. The needs of a systems language are very different than the needs of a virtualized or interpreted one. I honestly don't see how people use a single IDE for every language but I respect their choice to do it.
I was in Japan this year and didn't see any Mexican food in the 3 major cities I visited. I'm not saying it does not exist but it's definitely not common if it does.
That also makes sense, though. Food in Japan, even the foreign food, has a specific palette it's targeting. Mexican food is extremely different from Japanese food.
Typically, any food that is introduced to a new culture is successful once it's adapted to that cultures palette. Any Mexican food being successful in Japan would likely be more akin to the Mexican/Asian fusion places we have in the States than traditional Mexican food.
Stardew Valley is probably the best recommendation being made. 85 percent of the game happens with zero combat and the combat that does happen is pretty simple.
I will say that doing something interactive to try to get to sleep can easily back fire on you if you find the activity too engaging. You may be better off trying to read a book or taking a small dose of melatonin about an hour before bed.
Melatonin is the chemical your body produces to help you go to sleep. If you go this route just be careful to start with a small dose and work your way up if you find you need more. And also, don't take it too late because it will make it difficult to get up on time if you do.
Data definitely says the hard g. His interests are in being more human. Not pedantically arguing about the way the creator says things in an attempt to upend the majority. The latter is definitely Lore's jam, though
I don't think USA today or any other outlet should be protected. I do think the reporters that work there should be protected.
Corporations should be held accountable for what they say or "strongly encourage" others to say. Individuals should be protected if they get things wrong, though.
It's fine to not know every language. I'm not saying you must know every language. I'm saying that only knowing one and refusing to use another is a problem I've seen from PHP, Java, and C# cultures almost exclusively.
The only exception I'd say that makes sense is people who are using coding for a small part of their overall job. But full time software engineers should have at least a few options in their belt for backend that they understand and can use in different scenarios.
My issue with PHP isn't the language, it's the developers. PHP developer culture is much like C# and Java culture.
I could bring a million reasons I don't want to program in PHP and every time we talk about it, the PHP developer tells me I should be using it for everything. If I suggest that it may not be the best tool for a particular task at hand, the PHP developer tells me it's the only language they know so they will use PHP.
The issue is that this type of culture closes doors mentally. In any craft, we should try to use the best tool available for the task at hand. In carpentry you'd use a hammer with nails and a screwdriver with screws. In programming, there are times using PHP makes sense and times it doesn't.
In container based services, I tend to lean toward a compiled binary because it reduces the size of the container at run time and most modern languages don't require tons of heavy duty frameworks to scale well there.
In a monolith, a fully interpreted language with an MVC framework could make sense.
There are two separate concepts your are talking to here.
The first is what a vegan is. A vegan is a defined as
a person who does not eat any food derived from animals and who typically does not use other animal products.
Why they chose that lifestyle is the second concept you are taking about and it does not alter the definition for anything other than the individual person.
This isn't a good argument, though. You replied to somebody stating the intention with a description of a game that's in alpha.
Generally, they want everybody to have a good time, but that's not realistic right now. Star Citizen isn't being marketed as a fully functional game is being marketed as an alpha where people can see features that are being worked on.
Getting mad about one thing working as intended because something else isn't right now just sounds like your expectations aren't aligned with reality.
They really just haven't implemented the insurance kiosks yet. I do think they should take a lesson from real life and let those claims happen remotely.
I'm happy that the Citizen Con update included S42 being feature complete. I hope they will start moving some resources back to SC with that.
What people often forget is that SC has been a minor focus for a couple of years while they finish up Squadron.
It ignores a couple of important facts about Futurama to make the point is trying to make through a lens of today, though.
Ignoring the obvious "it's a cartoon" is that the ship in Futurama moves the universe around itself rather than moving through the universe. And the other being the article limits itself to today's technology, in general.
There is a cheaper option for just a single account. 13.99 in the US. I think that's a reasonable price and would pay it if it was just me. I just wish there was an option between 1 person and a whole family.
Are you certain this isn't a docker container you've logged into?