Alternatively you could look for Sell Orders on Inara.
Just make sure the last Updated is fairly recent
Alternatively you could look for Sell Orders on Inara.
Just make sure the last Updated is fairly recent
Look at the mission board, filter for materials, and select the ones that you need.
It’s not great and still takes waaay to long, but yeah
Tbh I’d just go to 21 Eridani
Fill up on Imp Shielding there and jump to the mat trader that’s like 7ly away and trade for the mats I need
Writing an axum REST API that interacts with a Postgres DB via sqlx.
Nothing fancy, really :D
Must be from above. Otherwise, the spacing on the engines would be way off.
attraktive Vergütung
wird nicht weiter Quantifiziert
🤔
Um das Deutschbuch aus der 7en mal zu zitieren:
Ich geb dir Propellerkick in die Fresse.
If KSP has taught me anything, it’s that slapping a couple reaction wheels on it will allow it to get back into the correct position.
Bavaria would be proud.
Why should it be dead?
The “haha funny flying city block” appeal quickly fades once you realise the T10 barely breaks 300m/s :D
Das der Hupt ist auch interessant weil du als Fußgänger, unter der Annahme dass du “geradeaus” weiterläufst, vor abbiegenden Verkehrsteilnehmern Vorrang hast.
Wenn ich mit dem Rad abbiege scheinen die Leute immer überrascht darüber. Diese Regel scheint aus den Köpfen von Abbiegenden und “Geradeausläufern” entfallen zu sein.
Something something rm -fr / to remove the french language pack
Lmao you were right
EDMC-Massacres is a plugin for EDMC which helps you keep track of total kills required when stacking pirate massacre missions.
If you don’t know about Massacre Stacking, here’s an explainer (youtube), (piped mirror).
Also… full disclosure — I am dev behind this plugin :)
There can be an infinite amount of certificates for a single domain.
When you setup a connection to a website you basically get a response back that has been signed with a certificate.
Your Browser / OS has a list of certification authorities that it deems trustworthy.
So when you get the response the browser checks if the certificate was issued by a trusted CA.
Now, if the EU forces browsers to trust their CA they can facilitate a man-in-the-middle attack.
In this instance they will intercept the TLS Handshake and give you back a response that was signed by their certificate. Your Browser deems the certificate valid and sets up a secure tunnel to the EUs Server.
From then on they can forward packets between you and the real website while being able to read everything in cleartext
Ich bin (noch) zu faul :D