I see. I didn't think I ever heard about that. I'm only familiar with them as in a digital version of paperwork, not a digital copy of a document.
I understand exactly how that happens then.
I see. I didn't think I ever heard about that. I'm only familiar with them as in a digital version of paperwork, not a digital copy of a document.
I understand exactly how that happens then.
I'm not a kid (see my other replies in this thread lol), but I've never had to use PDFs for much at all. The closest I've ever been to editing one is clicking a box to draw a signature or check a checkbox.
So I've gotta ask. Why would one need to rotate a PDF? They would be made on a computer, and naturally default to the correct orientation, no? I can't imagine why one would ever be sideways.
My younger brother will not flinch when talking about playing a first person game, (he says it for every game though) he will say a controller is superior.
Now I understand that there is a lot of wiggle room to debate the "best" input method, but I will die on the hill about a mouse being the best (and maybe best possible) input for look/aiming in a first person sense.
The left hand could use an analog input for sure, but digital movement is so rarely an issue it didn't matter a whole lot.
I will go as far as to throw him a bone and say that controllers are probably the best for something like a platformer (his genre of choice), or a racing game, or in some cases, 3rd person action. I will typically use Rocket League as an example of that, because that game is one of the few that analog movement is much, muuuch more important than analog camera control.
But keyboard and mouse is so widely usable for (and so often a clear front runner) that I have to dunk on him every time he shits on kb+m.
But then I think about my coming up learning and using computers, and our built in familiarity with kb+m, whereas these days, these scrubs are using touchscreens almost exclusively, and a keyboard just looks ancient right off the bat. And of course anything that "old people" use is definitely just totally obsolete and gross as soon as something else comes out.
So I give him consideration in that regard, but it saddens me that he won't think critically enough to understand the differences, and is not thinking about it. His brain is very literally saying "old way bad, new way good".
He's still too young, but damn the communication barrier is frustrating.
Tablets... in use at 2nd grade...
Damn. I know whether to call you a baby or call myself a geezer anymore.
The Internet itself didn't even become widely available until I was in 4th grade or so. Windows 95 was only a year old when I got my very first access to any computing device beyond a very simple calculator.
Being "online" wasn't a permanent status, it only applies for as long as you were allowed to tie up a phone line.
I could say more, but you've heard a bunch of back in my days already probably.
I got used to looking for registry tweaks, but I don't even know what to call it exactly.
The closest I've got is: A place for accessing hidden settings in Windows. I've made a couple typos in there and nuked an install or two of XP, but I never really changed much personally. Just kinda looked up various ways people would use it to accomplish x, y, or z, out of curiosity.
I don't have to deal with it anymore at least.
I hated apple way before I hated windows. But basically just fuck corporations entirely. All of them.
I've never heard of any of these.
Awesome
Now if that isn't stochastic terrorism, I don't know what is.
I don't think I've ever seen the word "allowlisted". Did someone forget "whitelisted" is a thing, or is that term finally cancelled?
His lawyers need to STFU fr.
This is the real Superbowl. A coworker of mine told me he treated Election Day as the super bowl each year, taking the day after off so he could stay up and watch the content all night.
I'm starting to see his point. I have paid attention to so much more political news the last couple years than I ever did before, and I'm really looking forward to this conference and the coverage of it afterwards.
True story coming up. I had a pretty major surgery the night of the Georgia run off election. The very first thing I asked when I remembered how to talk was "did Herschel lose?" I don't live anywhere near Georgia, but I just really had to know if that stupid fucker ended up losing. Last I knew when I got put under was it was pretty even, but way too early to call.
I woke up and after seeing all my siblings come to visit, I asked about politics. None of them had a clue what I was talking about. But I finally got motor control back and turned the room TV on to check on it. I don't think it was yet called at that point, but it was soon after. I was so happy. I don't know much about Warnock, but at least he won't be trying to join werewolf committees.
It was still way closer than it any business being.
Sorry about the random rant, that memory just hit me while I was typing.
Conservatives when Biden does something like walk the wrong direction: omg he's senile and clearly has dementia!
Conservatives when McConnell (maybe) has a fucking legit seizure: everything's fine, nothing to see here.
I learned that from the other reply
I understand exactly how that happens then.