Much more interesting (and weird) though is the kid with the giant boner sitting in its baby cart (third row from the bottom)
rootkit
@rootkit
Best posts made by rootkit
Latest posts made by rootkit
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RE: NSFW icon
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RE: NSFW icon
After about 200 refreshes, this particular popup finally popped up. Except for the text, not really interesting.
I made a screenshot but I'm far too lazy to post it. Instead, this here is where it links to.
Image, severely lacking to support the enthousiasm of the TS:O -
RE: C:\PROGRAM
Oh my fucking ass licking brain farting god. Where is Adblock (Avoidance of Deranged Bullshit from Loads of Overly Cachexic Killcows) if you need it?
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RE: C:\PROGRAM
@derari said:
@rootkit said:
@Buttembly Coder said:
I use SumatraPDF whenever I only need viewing capabilties, which is probably 99% of my use case.
Another one: Nitro PDF Reader. It acts as a PDF printer too, and has a few more nice features like the ability to "sign" a PDF using a scanned signature. It's pretty unbloated and reasonably fast too, and therefore my current choice.
Sumatra is the only pdf viewer I know that works reasonably well when
writing documents in TeX (ie, it doesn't lock the pdf, refreshs
automatically, and supports reverse search). I haven't tried Nitro, though.True dat.
I'd swear I once had another PDF viewer configured just like that, but I couldn't remember which one if my life depended on it. Fortunately it doesn't, so I'll be moving on.
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RE: C:\PROGRAM
@Buttembly Coder said:
@cheapie said:
@ender said:
I never liked FoxIt reader, because despite launching much faster than Adobe Reader, it was always much slower rendering complex pages. Since I usually start a program once, and then keep it in the background, those few seconds at startup mattered much less to me than the ability to quickly scroll through document. I did replace Adobe Reader with PDF-Xchange a few years ago though.
I use pdf.js (the Firefox built-in one), my Mom and grandparents use Evince, and my sister uses SumatraPDF.
I use SumatraPDF whenever I only need viewing capabilties, which is probably 99% of my use case.
Another one: Nitro PDF Reader. It acts as a PDF printer too, and has a few more nice features like the ability to "sign" a PDF using a scanned signature. It's pretty unbloated and reasonably fast too, and therefore my current choice.
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RE: SSIS Annotation
Maybe it's filtering based on key code, instead of key character. Still a WTF though as (as far as I understand from your post) SSIS accepts both numbers from the key pad and the regular ones in the top row of the alphanumeric keyboard section, but they forgot to do the same thing for the hyphen-key. So sue them.
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RE: My First Contractor Experience
Putting a vacuum cleaner up your pants is way more interesting than this story. Sorry bro.
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RE: PHP auto-formatter?
@bjolling said:
@rootkit said:
You might still give PhpStorm a 1% shot. It's quite nifty.
I use its sister product WebStorm for all my Javascript and HTML needs and I'm very happy with it. Based on that alone, I would trust PhpStorm.Edit: WebStorm integrates with Git so surely Blakey won't be able to resist to try it out ;p
PhpStorm does HTML, Javascript and CSS as well. And SQL. Plus a few more. Even inside PHP code (either through auto-detection or assisted; you can help the parser by using e.g. HTML / JS / CSS / SQL as heredoc or nowdoc variable delimiters). -
RE: Emergency Fix
@snoofle said:
[...] and probably a whole lot more WTFs to post for you.
In that case, I beg the gods of WTF to make it happen.
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RE: PHP auto-formatter?
You might still give PhpStorm a 1% shot. It's quite nifty.