Comment Licensing (Score 1) 44
Is WotC getting any of the gate fees? Also as much as people might generally enjoy D&D, it seems wrong to promote a company that has become so openly hostile to its own Open Gaming License.
Is WotC getting any of the gate fees? Also as much as people might generally enjoy D&D, it seems wrong to promote a company that has become so openly hostile to its own Open Gaming License.
People that already had it installed can probably use a cracked exe and use that. Assuming the ubisoft client doesn't try to uninstall it automatically.
Could you pirate The Crew and play it in any meaningful way? Sounds like it would require some sort of server emulator to run it without Ubisoft's approval.
At that elevation, you can probably just take em with birdshot.
Pull!
Stingers are cheaper than Patriot systems so that's a step in the right direction.
Apparently Tesla buys batteries from the same Chinese company (BYD).
Old school flak systems should be able to stop drones. They're generally slow and noisy, both in terms of radar cross section and audible signatures. Their only advantages are being cheap and flying low, making them vulnerable to all kinds of equally cheap weapons.
Anyone using sophisticated anti-missile defense systems to stop drones is wasting high dollar tech.
Most errata are irrelevant to standard home users. Even enthusiasts will struggle to detect errors in the CPU's behavior. More serious are the flaws that can be detected by typical end users.
Yes, I got mine in July of 2019 as well. It's three months out from five years. Close enough.
Sounds more like a buggy mobo than the CPU unless you got a dud. Of course I have mine watercooled so that it can't throttle. With a few tweaks to the VRM behavior, I've got it boosting up over 4.3 ghz all-core in some applications.
Single core boost usually won't hit 4.6 ghz, but that's my fault for fiddling with llc settings.
At least we're not getting pwned.
In this case, it would appear that modern AMD CPUs are not affected.
Intel's latest and greatest datacentre product is vulnerable. Lol!
It might not help, but it sure beats spraying sulphuric compounds into the atmosphere.
It's the second headline I've seen like that this month. There may have been more that I didn't notice.
As an owner of a 3900X, I have no meaningful or noticeable problems using my chip. It's been in service for five years.
It is easier to write an incorrect program than understand a correct one.