I use it a few times a week, usually while at work. Normally to visit a dead link or to find old or outdated info.
Yep. I'm so over American politics and I think the nation is headed in the wrong direction. I feel that the people are powerless against changing our trajectory. I had been considering doing a PhD abroad and this is really pushing that decision now.
Maybe Thriftbooks? They do offer shipping to Canada but it's not always cheap.
I use it all the time to help simplify long excerpts, giving me an introductory gist of what something says.
If you have a memory-mapped peripheral where there's a readonly register, I could see it being const volatile
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Most of the embedded world uses those.
These would be great for backups if they're cheap enough.
Here in Seattle, the main scary natural disasters are earthquakes. We haven't had a major one since 2001 or so, but supposedly there's a massive one coming relatively soon.
Signal works. The adoption is fairly slow, but I've had friends slowly begin to use it.
I hate how tipping is now customary at every single restaurant now, including places without servers.
I don't think it's very useful at generating good code or answering anything about most libraries, but I've found it to be helpful answering specific JS/TS questions.
The MDN version is also pretty great too. I've never done a Firefox extension before and MDN Plus was surprisingly helpful at explaining the limitations on mobile. Only downside is it's limited to 5 free prompts/day.
I'm a scrub that pays for YouTube Premium and I've also been running into songs and videos that just don't play recently because I'm using uBlock Origin.