Normal distribution with regards to what? "Do you watch anime weekly" is a binary question. There really isn't a distribution associated with that.
You don't need a massive sample size for surveys to give meaningful information. Play around with this sample size calculator if you want to see what the margins of error are: https://www.calculator.net/sample-size-calculator.html?type=2&cl2=95&ss2=4000&pc2=5&ps2=500000000&x=Calculate
So many great changes I'm looking forward to using in the new update! Being able to flip oil refineries and chemical plants is a huge QoL upgrade for making compact, tileable designs. If I need to scale a refinery/chemical pipeline hotizontally, I can just copy it, flip it, and butt the inputs or outputs together.
Setting assembler recipes with the circuit network seems more powerful (and complicated, seen by the number of combinators) than most players will ever use, but that's why I love this game. I think it's really funny how the devs went from, "Parametized blueprints might be too complicated for players," to, "just build a finite state machine out of logic gates to control your assembly machines." I'm really looking forward to seeing what other people are capable of doing with this. I'll have to dust off my notes from my digital logic classes before I have a go at it.
P.S. The devs totally missed the chance to make a Missy Elliott reference: "I put my thing down, flip it and reverse it."
The more bits per cell you store, the more dense and therefore cheaper your flash chips can be for a give capacity. The downside is that it is slower and less reliable since you have to be able to write and read exponentially more voltage states per cell, e.g. 2 states for SLC, 4 states for MLC, 8 states for TLC, etc.
The Trine series is pretty fun. It's a 2.5d puzzle platformer game. There are some combat bits, but most of the game is puzzles. I'd recommend the second one.
He killed four of his classmates and wounded seven others. 15 years old is old enough to know how terrible the impact of his actions would be. There is certainly more that we as a society could have done to help him with his mental illness, but that does not erase his agency and make him not responsible for his crimes. He has more than earned his punishment.
the timer has no idea if it was triggered during last boot. It only has the context of "this" boot, so it will do it right after a reboot and set a timer to start the service again after a week of uptime.
This is not correct. Persistent=true
saves the last time the timer was run on disk. From the systemd.timer
man page:
Takes a boolean argument. If true, the time when the service unit was last triggered is stored on disk. When the timer is activated, the service unit is triggered immediately if it would have been triggered at least once during the time when the timer was inactive.
OP needs to remove Requires=backup.service
from the [Unit]
section so it stops running it when it start the timer on boot.
You have the timer requiring backup.service, so it will run that service every time the timer starts on boot. Remove Requires=backup.service
, and that will fix the issue.
Well, for one, it's network attached storage. If it's not present in the network for one reason or another, guess what, your OS doesn't boot... or it errors during boot, depending on how the kernel was compiled and what switches your bootloader sends to the kernel during boot.
Just use nofail
in the fstab.
Second, this is an easy way for malware to spread, especially if it's set to run after user logon.
If your fileshare is accessible to you, it is also accessible to malware running as your user. Mounting the share via a filemanager doesn't change this.
Using the circuit network has always been kind of tedious, so I'm glad to see that it is getting some love for the 2.0 update. Showing the input and output signals directly in the UI and being able to have a description for the combinators is going to make debugging much easier.
@Scholars_Mate
@lemmy.world