A blowtorch and a pair of pliers.
boatswain
Oh gotcha, that's a shame. I wonder why?
FYI your spoiler text isn't working for me; nor is that of anyone in the reply chain. Not sure if this is a problem with Boost, some weird federation glitch, or something else.
I live 4 blocks from an old folks' home and have no idea what you're talking about.
I did yeah; deleted my content almost immediately after posting it because I went to double check. Counting is hard!
Oh crazy, there's no add-ons on iOS? I had no idea; I avoid Apple.
You might consider seeing if Container Tabs paired with the Temporary Containers addon serves your need. With that setup, every new tax you open is isolated from the local storage of your other sessions, much like private browsing. You can also set up defined containers for sites you want to remember the state of.
Hahaha:
if you continue to
try { thisBullshit(); }
you are going tocatch (theseHands)
Here's how Kagi summarizes it:
- Phoenix's rapid growth and development in the Sonoran Desert has been fueled by an unsustainable reliance on water resources, leading to a looming water crisis.
- The water crisis disproportionately impacts vulnerable populations like the homeless, who suffer greatly from the extreme heat and lack of access to water.
- Solving the water crisis requires collective action and political cooperation, which is hindered by increasing political polarization and extremism in Arizona.
- The rise of right-wing, anti-democratic movements like Turning Point USA are sowing division and undermining faith in democratic institutions and processes.
- The water crisis is intertwined with broader issues of inequality, immigration, and the urban-rural divide in Arizona.
- Arizona State University is experimenting with models of mass, accessible higher education that aim to transcend partisan divides.
- The experiences of undocumented immigrant families like the Cortez family illustrate the human costs of failed immigration policies.
- Despite political divisions, there are signs of common ground and pragmatic problem-solving around issues like water management.
- The document highlights the tension between individual freedoms/property rights and collective responsibility for shared resources like water.
- The water crisis in Phoenix serves as a microcosm for the broader challenges facing American democracy and society.
The tl;dr from the article (which is actually worth a read):
The very short version: Unix PIDs do start at 0! PID 0 just isn’t shown to userspace through traditional APIs. PID 0 starts the kernel, then retires to a quiet life of helping a bit with process scheduling and power management. Also the entire web is mostly wrong about PID 0, because of one sentence on Wikipedia from 16 years ago.
That's because in America we're so concerned about contaminants on shells that we clean all the protection off the outside, making the shells porous enough for bacteria to get through. Store-bought eggs in the US so have to be refrigerated.