

>Counter-Strike
> No unions.
>Counter-Strike
> No unions.
Xenia says hi.
LARPing in a Renaissance fair.
But humanity is dark.
“Call of doody”
Also, anon could be referring to the fact that soldiers on the field tend to dig holes to shit if there is no toilet available. Call of duty being a military based game could have had shitting mechanics like how actual soldiers in the field do.
>Skyrim
>The sky has no butthole.
India: Tax your stamps? Dude, they were taxing our salt.
Caesar? I barely know her.
I agree. The main reason to pay Oracle or any other JDK provider is to get support and patches. There are also specific use cases such as performance considerations where commercial JVMs may have low level optimizations that may be beneficial in certain use cases.
But for general development, even on enterprise level, you’d be fine with regular community editions of OpenJDK. In fact I don’t know of anyone who pays for commercial JDKs.
My main gripe is with Oracle, whose business model regarding Java is just scummy in general. If you use Oracle JDK and they come knocking, you deserve whatever happens to you. Google learned this lesson the hard way, we should learn from their experience.
Amazon Corretto is free even for commercial use and is optimized to run on AWS infra.
If you’re not on AWS then you have little reason to use it though it’s not a bad JDK distro itself.
I personally use Eclipse Temurin both in personal projects and at work.
Literally nobody I know uses Oracle Java. It’s either Open JDK or nothing. Even popular frameworks recommend using others (ex. Spring recommends using Bellsoft Liberica).
These alt forks are supported for longer and have the latest security patches while Oracle’s Open JDK only provides updates for six months, even for LTS releases. Is there even any legitimate reason to be using Oracle JDK at this point? If it really came to that I’d rather give my money to Bellsoft or Azul over Oracle.
Same thing. You’d have to boot into windows at some point.
That’s what I meant. Microsoft created the Office Open XML format as an open standard, but they don’t follow their own standard and make their “extended” version of the standard as the default.
Other Office suites like Libre Office support this format via strict mode, which is not selected by default when you save these files using the Microsoft Office suite.
Technically even Google does this with Chrome: Open standard JS but they also use custom components, sites that use these components break on other browsers.
This should not happen unless you booted into windows and ran an update.
Xlsx is actually an open standard, but only if you use strict mode, which Microsoft conveniently does not make the default option when saving. You have to choose it explicitly when saving.
Unfortunately imgflip prints text in all caps only.
What’s the point of winning if you don’t look good doing it?
I’ve been using namecheap. But not sure where they’re based.
American though.
The duty, it calls.