If you’re smart, you’ll make good commit messages in any commit, no matter how small and personal the repo. Because one day you’ll have no idea what that change was about and why and a small note will make it much easier to figure out.
If you’re smart, you’ll make good commit messages in any commit, no matter how small and personal the repo. Because one day you’ll have no idea what that change was about and why and a small note will make it much easier to figure out.
It was not. 30 years ago, it would have been very good, though, as a lot of media was still SD.
Device, maybe. What happens to the games bought from a DRM monopoly?
I don’t know. There are a lot of foods already out in the world.
That’s right. Got my words mixed.
It’s a Sony Picachu. You might be thinking of the Nintendo one.
Any real number, literally.
That’s what good link aggregators are for.
Then you can give it to someone else to read or sell it and even more people can read it.
Hot air/gas, hot water/liquid, and a hot solid behaved very differently. The numbers depend a lot on what’s being measured. There’s also a big variable of time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_(video_game)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elite_(video_game)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angband_(video_game)
Depends on how you constrain that idea. Open worlds were a very early idea, but old computers were somewhat capacity limited in how much content you could have.
or opera