But with Steam you haven't purchased a copy. First sale doctrine isn't likely to apply. You've purchased a license for access.
asret
Most travel insurance policies exclude cover once you're in your third trimester. The article mentioned that they'd be clarifying this in their policy as well.
Insurance policy limits are dictated by profits, not doctors' recommendations.
Our local one put in a tunnel underneath the runway - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKvSYrs0EsY
Though it looks like it might be lost to the public due to expansion plans for the airport :(
It was the American response to 9/11 that ended my desire to ever travel there. The latest bout of fascism just confirms it.
Get well soon.
I'm not sure I follow the all-in-one schema issue? Won't each endpoint have its own schema for its response? And if you're updating things asynchronously then doesn't versioning each endpoint effectively solve all the problems? That way you have all the resilience of the xml validation along with the flexibility of supplying older objects until each participant is updated.
Looks matter because it's a place to live. Many commieblocks deal with that just fine by having the green space around them though. I kind of like the look of some of them though - solid, practical, maintainable. Some of the modern builds in my local city look more like temporary emergency shelters - like the people staying there don't belong.
Looks like the ones in the picture are already surrounded by green spaces - they're probably already pretty great as far as skyscrapers go.
Merge what though? A question that's already been asked and what are likely low-quality answers already present on the existing question?
It's supposed to act as a gentle reprimand and point them to the correct behaviour. Pretty much the same way it works anywhere else if you walk in and disrespect a space.
The strict moderation is the main strength of it. Makes it so much easier to find useful answers and for those answers to be refined.
Most of the toxicity I've seen surrounding the site has been from people upset that they were asked to improve their search skills, asked to improve their question to be more useful for those answering them, or simply demanding that people answer to their deadlines.
It's hard to take complaints about the site seriously when so many of them seen to come from entitled arseholes being offended at being asked to not be arseholes.
They get moved to the init process (parent 1) if their original parent dies. The init process should always wait on its child processes so they'll get cleaned up then. No reboot needed.
Once they're zombies all they really exist for is to return an exit code for their parent - they're no longer running.
As others have said [uv] (https://github.com/astral-sh/uv) is likely a good option but since you've mentioned being a data scientist you might also check out [pixi] (https://prefix.dev/tools/pixi).
It's built on top of conda so will likely have all the packages you might need.
It's got quite a nice workflow, keeps things contained in the project directory, and adds a few conveniences over standard conda.
I think the issue here is that the game developers may not have any contract with PRS. Historically they wouldn't have had to - they'd license the music from the big music labels, stamp their game onto a CD and sell a product. Now they're not just selling a product - they're licensing access to a "performance" of it. Valve is the playing an active part in this by "performing" the works on demand. It seems stupid to me, but that's the world of content licensing.