Simple response. Nope. They don’t. They are employees, and the body camera's falls under employee/employer contract law. They don’t have to be a cop. But if they want to be, they have to follow the rules of their employer.
The war between humans and machines was already in full swing when the humans darkened the skies in an attempt to cripple the machines (which at the time were dependent on solar power).
Ive set my my oven to 125 - 175 degrees, then turn it off and put my phone, watch and even a PC in there to dry them out and dehumidify them for up to an hour. I then wait a day and then put them back to power. I’ve restored all non water proof devices this way so long as the battery doesn’t swell it seems to always work.
I remember fixing a graphics card years ago in the oven. Stripped all the heatsink and other removable parts off it and baked it for 15 mins or so. It reflowed the solider joints nicely and worked for several years afterwards.
It would be epic if the DDoS was from a swarm of KnightOS infected calculators. Even more if they were able to do it because Drew made a workable network stack. lol
Demoted him and yet it still exists? Personally not a fan of it. It’s not intuitive, but maybe it is if your a windows guy. But being a Linux guy, nothing about it is familiar to a shell experience.
I almost never run the code locally unless I see something questionable and can’t reason about what it will do because I’m unfamiliar with something in it. For that, I tend to use a REPL for just the snippet of questionable code.
However, if the code is a large enough change, and it needs testing anyways, I will run it.