🎶and you know what that means.
Gonna head down to the beach, gonna do some beachy things.🎶
🎶and you know what that means.
Gonna head down to the beach, gonna do some beachy things.🎶
Yes it does. It won’t be the first time in the Animal Crossing series that items become unobtainable due to an online service shutdown unfortunately.
I don’t mean in photos, they just fly around town in VTOL configuration all the time. Hardly ever see them at full tilt.
Anecdotal, but I almost exclusively see them flying in VTOL configuration
No but I read Wikipedia’s list of Osprey crashes…
I will not have the Osprey’s good name besmirched like this, I’ll have you know these things fly around here all the time and only one two have ever crashed in the forest outside town!
I got it again unfortunately, here’s a screenshot of what it looks like
Looks like it didn’t work unfortunately 😞 Thank you for the suggestion though!
In comparison to things like Twitter and Reddit, Facebook has actually been the most difficult to completely abandon because of Messenger. All my friends use it, and an attempt at switching everyone to Signal didn’t manage to stick. I would delete my Facebook account right now if it were possible to separate the two services.
When it happens, it doesn’t let me do anything other than stay on the already loaded webpage without restarting.
Open a new tab > “Restart to continue…”
Click a link > “Restart to continue…”
Type a URL > “Restart to continue…”
and etc
Thanks! I had no idea this setting existed and it will make Firefox so much more practical for me to use.
I just wish Firefox updates weren’t so intrusive. Having it hit me with “Firefox updated in the background, restart to continue using Firefox” while I’m trying to use QuickBooks for my job is so disruptive when QuickBooks doesn’t save automatically and never opens back up to where I left it off. I won’t go back to Chrome, but I never had it pull that sort of forced restart on me.
It shouldn’t be draining like that, at least…
That decreased bandwidth would still help to maintain a digital connection though, wouldn’t it? There’d be a weaker and slower connection as the devices get further apart, so I was thinking less demand on the connection would keep them from dropping it.
I don’t think it’s the same as what you meant exactly, but I looked it up and Bluetooth does hopping between 2.402 and 2.480 GHz.
I wonder if this has anything to do with how the bandwidth is automatically decreased when taking a call vs when you’re just playing audio. Less bandwidth means a slower but more robust connection or something like that?
Well, if Peter says it is, everyone should give up on it right now.