One place I worked at recently was still using Node version 8. Running npm install
would give me a mini heart attack... Like 400+ critical vulnerabilities, it was several thousand vulnerabilities all around.
ShaunaTheDead
joined 8 months ago
Forget Einstein's theories, there are literally people out there that think 1+1=2 is wrong and have a 500 page paper "explaining" why.
Inertia is the tendency of objects in motion to stay in motion, and objects at rest to stay at rest, unless a force causes its speed or direction to change.
from Wikipedia
So they're kind of just saying that once it picks up enough rotational speed.
I'm not super familiar with VLC but I asked a chatbot, does this help at all?
1. Open your video with VLC.
2. Navigate to the scene that you want to capture. You can use VLC’s frame-by-frame feature to access a specific frame in your video.
3. Capture the screenshot by pressing Shift+S (Windows and Linux) or Command+Alt+S (Mac).
4. Alternatively, from VLC’s menu bar, select Video > Take Snapshot.
If you’d like to use advanced controls to capture the screenshot, then from VLC’s menu bar, select View > Advanced Controls to enable those controls. Then, in VLC’s bottom-left corner, click the camera icon to take a snapshot1.
Your screenshot is now captured and saved in a folder on your computer. The default location for the screenshots is as follows:
1. Windows: C:\\Users\\username\\Pictures
2. Mac: Desktop/
3. Linux: ~/Pictures
If you’d like to change where VLC stores your screenshots, or you’d like to change the file format, then select Tools > Preferences from VLC’s menu bar. On the “Simple Preferences” window that opens, select the “Video” tab. To change the default screenshot directory, then in the “Video Snapshots” section, click “Browse” next to “Directory.” Then, choose the new folder that you want to set as the default for your screenshots. If you’d like to use a different image format (the default is PNG) for your snapshots, then click the “Format” drop-down menu and choose a new format. Your options include PNG, JPG, and TIFF. After you’ve made the changes, at the bottom of the “Simple Preferences” window, click “Save” to save your changes.
tar --help
is a valid command
You can count up to 1023 in base 2 using your fingers to represent 0s and 1s.
I think she's your type!