

no i didn’t, i simply noted that the uk and texas had implemented age gating laws.


no i didn’t, i simply noted that the uk and texas had implemented age gating laws.


it does not


cheddar and sour cream?
*swipe left*


also if you’re curious, uniracers/unirally is worth playing. at least for a while. the controls are weird, but also weirdly intuitive.
a class can be inherited from, a struct can not.


of course it’s an eu problem too, but it was the uk that pushed through undercooked regulation that forced everyone to comply.


the eu hasn’t put anything to law yet, which at least the uk has. but yeah, of course they’re not blameless.


yeah but it’s not made by the people the propaganda works for. they’re just cogs. normal propaganda is made by the people championing the cause in question.


advertising is just propaganda without a cause


it’s from the uk and texas.
i think it’s called “roasting” when it’s coffee


copyright notice hasn’t been updated in three years and no link to source. no thanks.
the definition is apparently 15 years. only two years left until the ps4 and xbone are retro consoles.
the latest volvo is 1.98m wide. the underground garage at my last place had a 2.2m wide door which i once managed to clip in my chevy volt. i wonder if the auto-pilot or whatever is good enough to navigate that.


for some, yeah. depends on your use case.


for what it’s worth matrix has worked well for us. it’s apparently a bitch to set up though.


now do the other ones
i think the most interesting design detail of lua tables is just glossed over as “nil-holes” in this article. namely, that nil values do not exist. there is no
table.delete(key)method, you just zero out the value and the key stops existing. the same thing is true for any variable, if you set it to nil it ceases to be. i find that implementation fascinating.