The beard was the source of his power. It’s all gone wrong since he shaved after joining the Yankees.
The beard was the source of his power. It’s all gone wrong since he shaved after joining the Yankees.
LA out here trying to buy another championship.
This just in, player that lost game thinks other team didn’t play fair. More at 11.
It's Ubisoft… of COURSE they were selling it in the worst possible state. XD
The community content makes it absolutely worth it, and I highly recommend it. Fair warning, it IS community created content. I've had to re-chart and submit updates to some of the song charts on there, but I also feel like that's helped me become a better musician as well. Knowing the song well enough that I can tell when it's wrong and then I get to use (ToneLib-Jam, for me personally) another piece of the toolkit to fix it and resubmit.
I use it with my focusrite scarlet (2i2 2nd gen) via asio on W11 and it works fine. Running it in windowed mode lets you set the resolution and put it anywhere on your screen you want.
There are lots of walkthroughs online on how you can set up asio. Modding it consists of replacing a single DLL and then adding your settings to a text file.
If you’ve got big boy audio gear, my assumption is that you’re not using RS for learning to play. It’s awesome for picking up new songs or just playing along with songs you love.
Check out customsforge.com for user created content.
Defederation isn’t the answer. Use the tools you have available as a user and block instances/users you don’t want to share content with.
I think it’s less the what and more the why. Kevin Mitnick was, by a lot of accounts, not even a very skilled “hacker”. But his high profile arrest and sentencing highlighted the issues of a developing internet and the immediate backlash of institutional forces, both government and corporate, quickly rushing to shut down any and all discourse around information and knowledge being “free”.
This created an equal but opposite backlash AGAINST the perceived ignorance of the government at what the internet actually was, and the corporations that wanted to control and monetize it. (In hindsight, we can see who won that one)
This helped propel an entire “hacker” subculture into pop culture and modern life.
“Free Kevin” became a common sticker or t-shirt at local 2600 meetings, or other hacking groups all over the U.S. and you’d see it left on defaced websites from young groups testing out their skills or latest exploits on poorly configured servers.
Even as quite a bit of these hackers would ridicule and deride Kevin for being bad, the saying continued because, in the end it wasn’t about Kevin. It was any or all of us. Doing things made illegal by legislators that didn’t even understand what was in the laws they were signing could have put any of us in jail. So “Free Kevin” became kind of synonymous for “Free Information”.
Through all of this was Kevin, just trying to live his life. He got out of jail, settled down and went on living. His passing was a lot like his life after prison, quiet and uneventful. Like a lot of people, I didn’t even know he was battling cancer.
So my comment below that Kevin is free is just, to me, one final call out into the dark for an idea, and a person, that helped me get to where I am today.
Kevin is free
Astros pitchers are STRUGGLING this year.