Yeah you can only use each piece of information once so you need to constantly discover new obscure facts
Yeah you can only use each piece of information once so you need to constantly discover new obscure facts
If you’re missing the hard drive rails for an iBook G3 (500MHz late 2001, unsure if this is true for other revisions) so you just use some paper to stop the drive from shorting out the motherboard then you need to be careful if the drive tilts towards the front of the laptop because it gets caught on a transistor under the paper and would probably snap it off the board if you pushed too hard.
That’s verifiably true information that’s probably never been posted online before, so all you need to do is verify that it’s true with your own hardware and then prove that it did not exist anywhere before this comment and then you’ll prove I’m not a bot.
This should be how captchas work from now on and someone has to manually verify and approve you I bet that would be super fast and reliable
They used to have friends and family but they have now become hotdogs
Linux roleplay except it’s just you by yourself
I had been wondering about that too so I looked it up and apparently it’s just what discover displays whenever there’s an update that doesn’t change the version number which is things like rebuilds with a newer compiler. Very confusing wording, I feel like just “update of version [version]” would be less confusing
I mean this is a terrible answer, but DS pictochat fits that