

Another Tetris clone with a beautiful UI and sound design and an intuitive control, in my opinion the best falling block game at least for Android.
(I don’t think this is on fdroid though?)
It even works in just a web browser!
Another Tetris clone with a beautiful UI and sound design and an intuitive control, in my opinion the best falling block game at least for Android.
(I don’t think this is on fdroid though?)
It even works in just a web browser!
Pretty cool collection you have there. Unfortunately, the web version doesnt seem super accessible to Smartphones. Is that all a huge codebase? Has charm.
If you know GitHub, code hub is the same thing but free and open source, and working on federation support.
Thanks :)
For sudoku, I recommend LibreSudoku, which is foss, has a really nice and modern UI, and features killer sudoku as an alternative game mode (which I much prefer).
And why do you think this is the case? Could it possibly be because the infrastructure is completely designed for cars, and using anything else is just not safe so you’d have to be a madman to go with these options?
Imran sure, I get rural, cars are good for rural areas, but not for towns etc.
Oh, I did not know that. Well, it makes sense that it has a heap allocation, as it becomes more or less global. Though not sure why the atomic operations are needed when the value inside is immutable.
You mean mutex? Arc allows synchronous read only access by multiple threads, so it’s not a performance bottleneck. Locking a mutex would be one.
Nurses and caretaker staff “Pflege” are needed here in Germany too, but not sure how viable the pay is.
A theory proven is progress, don’t you think?
I liked it. It’s not the pinnacle of entertainment but it was kind of cute and I had a good time with it.
If it’s really rainy protect your fire by having two people hold a plane up.
あああーなるほど。冷たいあるいは最終的なものと思われるかもしれないです。けど、ドイツ語に慣れた私にとっては、文の終わりがわがところはどこしらないです。習うしました、ありがとう。
This kind of sentence is difficult, so I used some translator help :/
ありがとう。
私は質問があります。なぜあなたがフルストップを使わないですか。ドイツ語にはたくさんフルストップがありますから。
I’m studying Japanese for over a year now. I recently had another motivation spike after seeing my favorite singer, Ado, live for the first time and understanding just enough to understand that I don’t really understand. I have been doing mostly kanji and vocabulary practice with Wanikani over the past time, but since about 2 weeks, I’m going strong again with daily studying.
I think I’m currently reaching the tipping point where my sentences start to become meaningful, but still take some time to formalize. Having made it a habit to write a few short sentences in 日本語 is something I would definitely recommend, at any level probably. It helps train the learned stuff and adds an immersion factor that is very fun.
話 and 語 are different kanji though. One is talk and one is language. 語 does not seem to have 「はな」as a reading according to jisho.org
日本人ですか。英語は勉強しますか。場語はドイツ語。二年以上日本語を学勉強しています。難しいですけど、日本語は美しい。英語、頑張ってね。
I hope I didn’t make too many mistakes there! I try to write a few sentences per day lately, and for more complex sentences, I use a translation service (https://deeply.com/) and a dictionary to check. The key to language learning is to do at least a little every (or most) days. It’s kind of amazing that I can use English to learn other languages nowadays.
I get that coding cryptography is fun. I did it in university for the relevant classes where we had been given specific exercises, test vectors, in the second one even automatic testing with thousands of test cases, and speed mattered too. For education, that’s pretty amazing, but if you do your own Crypto and put it in production you’re just asking for trouble.
This really is just an AES GCM case. And don’t understate the beauty of using a well formalized and thought out crypto primitive for actual applications. Cryptography is fucking cool.
The free operating system Debian is based on the Linux kernel and various other softwares, while Arch is an architectural concept through which people and goods can be brought into or out of a building.
It does work, it just isn’t the most intuitive UX.