I've played World of Warcraft since the first Beta and it's been a great ride, at least up until the last expansion. The news of Microsoft's acquisition has me hopeful for great new MMORPG.
Here's my recipe, adapted from numerous others found on YouTube:
1: Cut one red onion along the grain to minimize cell damage,
2: Simmer the onion slices in water a few minutes to soften them,
3: Put the slices into a 16oz mason jar,
4: Fill the jar half with white vinegar and half with water,
5: Add a pinch or two of Diamond Crystal salt and a pinch or two of cane sugar. 6: Refrigerate overnight.
The onions turn a beautiful shade of pink as they age and they can last for weeks without going bad.
Modern-day NYT crosswords are much more like the "British" crosswords described in the article in that they are are often chock-full of clever, cryptic clues.
I customized a jekyll template[1] to publish my Obsidian knowledge base and increase the discoverability of notes, which could be better in the app. Also, I wasn't comfortable being tied to the "publish" feature that is still in development.
Capital Police opened the security line, encouraged the "protesters" inside, and were even shown having selfies taken with them. What other conclusion can you reach than that this was supported if not organized by someone with authority over the security forces sworn to protect the Capital? If true, this is Sedition.
At what time point in the video do you see the protesters break through the police line? I scanned through the 1.5 hour video and didn't find it. It seems like the whole video was filmed from the same location.
It's hard to tell but it looks like a door was either breached or opened to the far left. There is a loud thud happening at the same time but it's hard to tell if that's what caused it.
It's seems to be off the side of the barricades so it doesn't appear anyone was "let in".
I can confirm this, I saw a video on twitter showing the guards opening up the barricades and letting people get in. But they most likely were acting on an order to do so.
Microsoft Windows actually provided a transactional file system called Transactional NTFS (TxF)in Windows Vista. However, due to the complexity and lack of widespread use, it has since been deprecated.
I believe the Telegram app has a peer-to-peer feature that allows communication to be routed through other devices rather than requiring communication with the Telegram servers
Just saw in the WSJ:
"Microsoft has paused negotiations to buy the U.S. operations of the video-sharing app TikTok after President Trump said late Friday he opposed the deal, according to people familiar with the matter."
Strange that Chrome doesn't appear to trust broot.exe. When that binary is downloaded, the downloaded file message is: broot.exe is not commonly downloaded and may be dangerous.