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I ran the same test on my ryzen 3900X with no issues, MSI X570 ACE motherboard, seasonic PSU.


Unfortunately the font rendering is still not up to Chromes, a lot of sites look weird. Fastmail for instance is rendered with a visibly smaller font on FF, and it looks blurry on FF. (Win10).


In case no one told you "en" words usually map to masculine and feminine in German, and "ett" words are neutral.


As a native Swedish speaker, albeit with little interest in languages and grammar, I can't see how that would help anyone. How do you know if "bil" (car) is masculine/feminine or neutral (en bil, ett bil)? Open to learn here :)


It helps because words describing a profession, a person or something animate are usually male/female. The same goes in Dutch, where "de" refers to male/female and "het" to neutrum.

There are several rules of thumbs which can help foreigners to correctly guess the article in both Swedish and Dutch. Of couse, they'll only be an accurate guess at best, but they can give you a headstart as a novice learner.


Well, it works for many cognates. Haus/house/hus all come from the same word, so if you know that it's "ein/das Haus" you can expect it to be "ett hus/huset" in Swedish. Same with e.g Hund/hound/hund, "ein/der Hund" is masculine so it is of common gender in Swedish "en hund/hunden".


They were saying on the stream that they would first build a replica of the ground environment in the lab to test run the deployment. And I believe this also includes the time to drill a deep hole.


We used to copy C64 digital tapes on a double cassette deck, using analog copy, running at double speed. Most times it worked, sometimes not.


Compiler/runtime can create two pointers with different integer values that point to same memory address. The article explains a few reasons why that might happen. It's very uncommon, but it's valid in the standard.


You can disable these “features” on enterprise but you need to dig around in the settings and google how to do it.


That's good. It's an ordeal to disable them on Pro, and the once-good guide I found[1] is usually out of date (or some of its settings get overridden) with every major update.

[1] https://superuser.com/questions/973009/conclusively-stop-wak...


> That's good

No, it's really not.


I could have been more clear. That was directed at the first clause:

> You can disable these “features” on enterprise

Or are you saying that it's not good that they can be disabled (perhaps because people get lazy, run out-of-date vulnerable software, and end up infected with ransomware or part of a botnet?)


My guess would be that their point is: It's not good that those things are in Windows at all, and it's even worse that you have to dig around to disable them. I'd certainly agree there.


I can do the same in Germany with public insurance.


Probably similar in sweden. I'm sure I could get a second or third opinion without a problem (for anything potentially serious). Maybe someone would start question what I'm doing if I ask for >3 doctors but I'm not sure that's a bad thing.


The difference to the US is that the companies that owns the cables have been forced (by lawmakers) to share that infrastructure with anyone who wants to start an ISP.

My parents in Sweden recently got fiber to their house in the countryside. There's a company that owns the fiber and you pay them ~10 EUR a month. Then you pick your ISP, whichever you want.


Unless you follow a zero warning policy they are almost useless. If you have a warning that should be ignored add a pragma disable to that file. Or disable that type of warning if it's too spammy for your project.


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