Usually, yes. But in some movies they drive the plot. The sex scenes in A Somewhat Gentle Man (2010) are hilarious, help establish the character, and are a pretty challenging wank.
The Nobel Committee is appointed by the government and mostly consists of retired politicians, so the lines are a little blurred.
Also not the first time someone blames Norway for something the Nobel Committee did. China was butthurt for a decade after Liu Xiaobo got the prize, and removed visa waivers for Norwegian citizens as well as restrict trade.
/dev/md127 is probably a raid 1 from a previous installation. Assuming you don't need the data on it, you can either delete or ignore it.
I'm not familiar with this exact installer, but I have installed Debian a bunch before. Judging by what I'm seeing here, you probably need to do a bit of manual labor. I'm guessing you first create partition tables (usually gpt), then raid partitions, then combine them into a raid, and maybe then put lvm on top of that again, and finally a filesystem. If you're planning to go the lvm route you probably want to create a smaller raid on the start of the disk for /boot (250-500MB should suffice) separate from the lvm, because last I checked you can't boot from an lvm volume.
Lots of things lead to increased risk of birth defects, like having children after the age of 30. I thought it was pretty well known that the risks associated with inbreeding drops off pretty sharply at the cousin level? At that point I think the appropriate reaction is social stigma, but not legal ramifications.
Most teams I've been in would do a time boxed task (sometimes referred to as a spike) in those cases. Basically, you get a task with maybe 3 or 5 story points, and the goal is to either complete it or find out what it takes to do so. Then you make follow-up tasks for the next sprint. It's worked pretty well for me in those cases with a lot of uncertainty.
I imagine they do when training in Norway at least, but the whole point of those exercises is to make them better at dealing with winter warfare. The Norwegians already know how to dress for the cold, so it's not exactly an even pairing. Not sure the results would be the same if they did the same exercise in Texas heat.
Nah, they're not telling him outright what to do, that wouldn't work. He's very poor at doing what he's told. They are manipulating him constantly though.
I don't know how you can change your perspective, but every life has inherent value. If something happened to you, it would really fuck up someone's day. If you have friends or family, it would fuck up several days for them. Even if you don't have friends or family, whoever finds you and/ or deals with it would definitely not enjoy the experience. So simply by staying alive and healthy you are improving the life of multiple people.
Also, you're probably having a more positive impact than you realize. If you help an old lady get her walker over a curb, that's a huge deal to her, you might not even register it. Same thing if you hold the door open for someone carrying something, or any other little thing. It doesn't even have to be an actual act of helping. If you buy groceries without being an asshole to the clerk, you are improving their day by reducing their amount of assholes per customer.
I don't go around thinking about my inherent worth, but whenever I'm feeling down I try to do something nice and savor how I improved someone's day. If it's in person, I look for their smile. If it's online, I imagine it. After I submit this comment, I'm giving myself a little pat on the back. I don't know if it helped, but I tried, and that's what matters.
For home Internet it depended on where you lived. There were a lot of people online from a nearby city, but my rural town didn't have that many. Not sure how Norway compared to other countries.
What we did have in abundance, though, was print magazines about computers and the Internet. Some came with a floppy disk (later a CD) with downloaded websites on them. I remember accessing a Marilyn Monroe fan page via floppy disk in the early days. All those magazines wrote about stuff you could do on the Internet, like send emails, use Usenet, chat on IRC, and even do instant messaging using ICQ.
So a lot of people knew about this stuff even without home Internet. And we tried it out in the computer lab at school, where the rest of the kids saw it. So I'd say enough kids born in the early 80s experienced enough IRC that I'd call it mainstream, at least compared to today.
Late 90s, at least in Norway. Everyone with access to the internet would hang out on IRC. The biggest channels were named after countries or cities, and were packed with teenagers DM-ing random people asking "ASL?". The nerds would hang out on other channels, of course.
Usenet was also mainstream around the same time, until it lost out to web forums.
IRC is still the main way I keep in touch with my nerdier friends. Quality of conversations have gone way up after it dropped off the mainstream as well. Highly recommend.
In this case "Doomer" is probably an alternate word for Gen Z. They are sometimes called the doomer generation.