important: the gold medalist for women’s shooting (who is also south korean) looks like she took the shot right before running to class with toast in her mouth
Germany’s problem, that other countries don’t have, is the “Schuldenbremse” (debt break). The USA and China are heavily investing by taking on debt while Germany isn’t investing anything and can barely keep public services alive.
If only it was just the public sector. I do agree with you, but the problem is cultural. It’s not just the government. None of the big or smaller corporations or companies are investing either.
People - everyone, including you and me - don’t think before most of their acts. And a lot of bad habits boils down to conditioning or lack of.
That’s likely the case for littering: they do it without thinking, justification, or reasoning. “I got some trash, I don’t want it, so I throw it on the ground.”
I really not sure about that last paragraph of the premise shot. I think the top is finite suffering for finite deaths but infinite individuals and then the bottom is finite suffering for infinite deaths of finite individuals. Honestly it sorta seems like the deaths are the suffering or at least part and parsel with it so I think it finite suffering/death for infinite individuals or infinite suffering/death for finite individuals.
At least I can fight Malenia 50+ times without any tedious things in-between. If you die three times at a boss in an 80s game, you’re starting that game over. I would say that if 80s/90s games had similar qol improvements then most of them would not be as hard as souls games.
Yeah, most of the challenge back in the day was clunk, lack of information, and game design derived from arcades, where you had to die so that you’d use more quarters.
just reading off their site: Prerequisites A hackable Nintendo Switch console (preferably a model that is vulnerable to the fusée-gelée exploit). Visit Is My Switch Patched? to check if your console is not patched. A microSD card with at least 32 GB of storage capacity. 64 GB or higher is recommended. A USB-C to USB-A or USB-C to USB-C cable to connect your Switch to your computer. TegraRcmGUI – Download TegraRcmGUI_v2.6_Installer.msi ums-loader – Download ums-loader.bin Hekate – Download hekate_ctcaer_X.X.X_Nyx_X.X.X.zip Windows users: Also download nyx_usb_max_rate__run_only_once_per_windows_pc.reg and run it for faster transfer speeds over USB. For details, see the NOTE section in the release page. This hekate configuration file – hekate_ipl.ini Atmosphére – Download both atmosphere-X.X.X-master-XXXXXXXX+hbl-X.X.X+hbmenu-X.X.X.zip and fusee.bin. Lockpick_RCM – Download Lockpick_RCM.bin NXDumpTool – Download nxdumptool.nro nxDumpFuse – Download win-x64.zip TegraExplorer – Download TegraExplorer.bin (Optional) JKSV – Download JKSV.nro Download this homebrew application if you wish to dump your save data from your Switch to yuzu. RCM Jig – We highly recommend one like this, but you could use any of the methods outlined here.
One tip for the final Nod mission I would have wanted to know before playing it - the game tells you that you have time until the GDI station makes three orbits and then gives you an hour timer. I was running out of time and made a despearate push for the final objective with just seconds remaining and then… another hour timer started. You have 3 hours to beat that map, I thought it was just the one =/
It’s the finale where you have all the toys and get to play with the enemy in any way you want. Don’t make the same mistake as me and rush through it, you can take your time.
Use PuTTY to set up a reverse tunnel. You’ll need to create a restricted tunnel-only user in your machine. Make sure to use key auth.
From your local machine, connect to localhost:portnumber.
As an alternative, you might be able to set up OpenSSH in Windows (yes it’s possible), then use the ProxyJump setting in your local ~/.ssh/config to connect via a tunnel to the final box.
Here’s how you configure the server to not let the user wreak too much havoc:
<span style="color:#323232;">Match User restricted
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> PermitOpen 127.0.0.1:3389 [::1]:3389
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> X11Forwarding no
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> AllowAgentForwarding no
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> ForceCommand /bin/sh -c 'while sleep 999; do true; done'
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> ClientAliveInterval 1
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> ClientAliveCountMax 2
</span>
I wasn’t able to set up a reverse tunnel, because I’m also under a corporate VPN :( I was able to get xfreerdp to work, though! Maybe I can add some port-forward + tunnels and be free :P
If your local machine is not reachable from the internet, you could set up the cheapest VPS - you can get a free one for 12 months at azure.microsoft.com/en-us/free/#all-free-servicesConnect from your destination machine (the firewalled one) to the VPS, and set up a reverse tunnel. For example, drop this into your ~/.ssh/config on the destination machine:
Make sure to use SSH key auth, not passwords, and never transport secret keys off-machine. It’s easier to wipe and recreate a VPS, if you lose keys, than to explain to Security folks how you were the donkey that enabled the breach.
Even though most people don’t agree with the stats, I think it makes sense because Arch users are never satisfied with their setup. It could cause many of them to choose an average number.
kbin.life
Active