Warms my heart how well Russia protects and looks after her new citizens during the act of voting.
Just look at this pic: If she were to make an error with her vote, those officials can point it out and correct her on time, before the ballot disappears in the ballot box. And if she happens to be an enemy of the state, she can be dealt with immediately before she has a chance of attacking the Russian democracy.
Shows you that Putin really does care in a way western leaders don't.
If a lack of heroin supply leads to thousands of dead in Europe from synthetic replacement drugs, then the logical conclusion would be to decriminalize the drug and license its controlled cultivation in Europe.
It can never escape because its turning speed helps nothing while the distance is big, so the pursuing ship can always catch up to it again.The only reason a fighter pilot has a chance to escape a faster missile is when the missile's targeting system can only see in front of it, so when it overshoots it loses its target.But with a faster turning speed, the chased ship can evade the pursuer forever, if the captain always turns at the perfect moment.
It definitely sounds like it could fit into the ADHD / Autism spectrum.I am diagnosed with ADHD and have a very similar compulsion, but with Linux distros. I used to keep switching between Debian Stable and Arch.For me, the driving factor was that I wanted my computing environment (which is where I spend most of my time) to be absolutely perfect and "clean". Quitting the distro-hopping was like quitting an addiction. I made a conscious decision to stick with Arch and deal with all problems that arise without switching back. Getting involved in community service and charitable work also helped. I simply don't have several hours of uninterrupted free time anymore to reinstall and set everything up again.
I always find it kinda weird when people criticize free software.Like, the developers make something, give it to you for free, pay for server space so you can download it for free, and then you say "it sucks".OK, just don't use it then.
My Ubuntu broke literally every time I did a version upgrade. It's probably better now, but I'm not going back.The last system that straight up broke for me was a default installation of Debian Stable, and that wasn't long ago.
I understand Arch isn't easy to use or maintain.But in my opinion, if you use something wrong and it breaks, that doesn't mean it's unstable. And if you update Arch by simply hitting "pacman -Syu" every day, you're doing it wrong.
Every Windows version was shit when it came out, then became good through updates by the time the next version came out.Except for Windows ME and 8, which were just shit.
Sometimes I long back for the times when I just used my computer to do things, instead of forming an opinion about the compression rate of my cursor's image data.
There is no replacement that has exactly the same features, because that would be identical software
There is no software that is bug/issue free
There are replacements that can do the same tasks and offer advantages over Microsoft Office (LibreOffice, Nextcloud Office, Collabora Office, Softmaker Office). Their main issue is that they aren't what everyone uses.The other issue is that Microsoft Office itself respects neither the open document standard, nor their own published standard for the .docx format, so it's literally impossible for anyone outside Microsoft to make a 100% compatible program.