Yeah. Can't vouch for ASRock or TUF but I've never had issues with RoG.
Sylvartas
That includes Alienware btw
Maybe that's when they also added the ability to subscribe to channels, making it actually useful to have an account if you weren't uploading videos ?
Idk, just spitballing, my own account is from 2009, because in 2006 my parents definitely didn't have a broadband subscription, and Dailymotion was kinda superior to YouTube for a short time, so that's where I usually went for a while.
I mean, NMS also preemptively solved that problem by having much more simplistic planet/solar systems generation and simulation systems
Insurgency : Sandstorm
I think it requires steam but iirc there are community servers so maybe there are non-vac servers (which shouldn't require steam)
You had me at Nexus 5. My favorite smartphone out of the 5 I've owned
Because I estimated that my time was better spent doing something other than trying to guess what robot this comic is referencing and researching a decent source explaining how that robot actually works and risking being wrong anyway because what the fuck do I know about robots and marine biology
Also, correct me if I'm wrong but aren't these robots about getting garbage out of the water ? Sure they might pick up some organisms but I assume the vast majority of the ones big enough to actually get picked up can easily escape, and the smaller ones just pass whatever filters it has and get thrown out with the water
Part of the problem is simply defining ultra-processed foods.
The new CDC report used the most common definition based on the four-tier Nova system developed by Brazilian researchers that classifies foods according to the amount of processing they undergo. Such foods tend to be “hyperpalatable, energy-dense, low in dietary fiber and contain little or no whole foods, while having high amounts of salt, sweeteners and unhealthy fats,” the CDC report said
Yeah from what I read about him, Bautista actually put in some serious work to be a decent actor
noblesse oblige* (which means literally "nobility obliges"). And the idea is that as a noble, one should behave with nobility, which includes caring for the people one holds power over, and generally the poors.
But people abiding by this concept would probably have seen nothing wrong with the fact that some people are born into poverty, with someone lording over them, and that it was basically impossible for them to ever become nobles. So, not quite "from everybody according to their abilities" , imo.
That's him indeed