It’s taxed as income when you receive it. If you hold onto it for over a year then sell it you pay capital gains (which are lower) on the difference between the grant price and current price (if it went up).
It’s taxed as income when you receive it. If you hold onto it for over a year then sell it you pay capital gains (which are lower) on the difference between the grant price and current price (if it went up).
Because support is hard enough without supporting other people’s code
The reason I don’t think it’s all that in line with Diablo these days, though, is simply the pacing of the gameplay. You blow up screens of enemies at a time, and your deaths are often so fast that you’re not really sure what killed you.
Yeah, that’s why I don’t care for POE anymore these days.
It is a classic Roguelike
I get that Roguelike is basically a vaguely defined genre now, and though Torchlight 2 in a great game it’s definitely not a “classic Roguelike”.
We used AA on our CRTs back in the day. Of course we were all running like 1024x768 as the resolution so it was a lot more needed. The higher your resolution the less you need it.
The more surprising part is that there are companies I’ve never heard of that cost even more.
Xterm supports multiple tabs right? Do that? If not then tmux.
I thought it was killed for VSCode since they ended up under the same umbrella.
That’s assuming he’s not misclassified like the majority of contract positions are.
That sounds an awful lot like even their first party cartridges could be attack vectors.
Is there anything backing up claims that it has AI generated assets?
I’m on Linux and Valve and Itch are the only ones with first class Linux support. Everyone else you have to dick around with running their launchers through wine or lose features.
That’s not what Valve’s policy said at all. It basically says you have to promise you aren’t infringing and disclose how it’s used so customers can make their own decisions.
https://steamcommunity.com/groups/steamworks/announcements/detail/3862463747997849619
It’s basically the most conservative fence-sitting position they could have picked.
I’m not low income but I do think McDonald’s is pretty poor value for the quality. You can usually go someplace with much better food for the same or slightly more now - they’re a long way from being ‘cheap’ food.
No it’s not? Fiber is a bad solution for short runs for residential use inside people’s homes. Copper can pull 10 gig speeds or more.
Not on your computer though
There are a lot of very good reasons to switch back to copper for the last portion of a run. I highly doubt that consumer internet in Japan is terminating fiber directly into peoples’ computers. Fiber is a lot more expensive both for the line, to run it, more prone to breakage, the network cards are more expensive, etc. It’s really not needed for most purposes.
Also no one uses cat3 for data and it can’t be run for ‘hundreds of feet’. And LC fiber IS used in the US - that’s a kind of connector not the kind of fiber.
We tend to get one week of this kind of weather a year and the rest of the time it’s in the 40s for winter. The one week is colder than usual this year though.
Gotta say I’m really looking forward to waiting for the light rail for up to 26 minutes with temps in the teens.
I’d imagine reddit could be profitable too if they stopped throwing money at stupid shit like NFTs and avatars. Selling API access for AI training was a good move in terms of bringing in income since it basically costs them nothing, and they could have totally pulled that off without pissing off half their userbase.