Babe, wake up! New Factorio balancers just dropped.
Now I feel dumb I never thought of this. I mean, I did use them in the main bus, as explained, but still plopped down "normal" balancers in outpost.
Will try it with the next run
Babe, wake up! New Factorio balancers just dropped.
Now I feel dumb I never thought of this. I mean, I did use them in the main bus, as explained, but still plopped down "normal" balancers in outpost.
Will try it with the next run
Sounds familiar haha
(If I am not wrong this is a Resident Evil reference)
That's the neet part. You can't
After 60 hours I finally left Gleba. As soon as I got "home" had to head back to Gleba. Still stuck there. In the beginning I hate Gleba, now I love it. It gave me back the feeling of playing Factorio for the first time, running around and know nothing (and I I have over 3.5k hours). 10/10 would recommend the DLC.
A sad news. Condolences to his family. May his legacy continue to inspire others as he did.
This is the way
Source: I am from the Alps
I work from home since 2012, so almost 12 years. The small company where I work started allowing remote working with me, and then many colleagues followed. Now we are 100% remote with one day a week in office. All my workmates and I know very well that we are far more productive when at home compared to when we are in office. My commit history also confirm this. I will never take in consideration another developer position if not allowed at least 80% of remote working.
What if an almighty God created the universe without evil, but with free-will, and then one angel decided to challange the way God rules, so that God has to let him rules to show everyone whose way of rule is the best?
Simply killing that angel would not answer the challenge, on the contrary, killing that angel would demonstrate that God is a dictator.
Pasted from a reply to another user.
Wow great advice and also works in Italian if you change H with A: Abbracciare, Ascoltare, Aiutare.
My two cents: I strongly agree with this. We just deployed an intranet blazor server app running on Linux (don't know which distro) and apache (we might switch to nginx soon). It works very well and we had to write less than 100 lines of JS (mostly for file download and upload) One of my workmates was hired one year ago and at the time he didn't know anything about .Net stack. Now he is mostly autonomous and he loves .Net and blazor in particular. Obviously YMMV.
I don't know from 1903 to 1980 but from 1890 to 1903 they did not fly at all. The first "modern" flight happened in December 1903.
That sounds like a good plot for an episode in a tv show. I sense potential here. Haha