Don’t leave out Spez.
I’m not pausing it for you. I’m pausing it for me, so I don’t miss anything while you are shuffling around the room disturbing my focus.
Look into the LTSC version on Win10.
It doesn’t contain UWP apps and stays on a stable version for years like Server OSs.
It’s like $130 for an upgrade license for it, or you can just run it without a license and the only downside is the watermark (that you can easily remove).
You don’t need Windows Server for that. Windows 10/11 would serve that need.
Why are people installing Server 2022 with a GUI even?
This seems like a case of “people using Windows Server as a desktop get desktop features in an update”. Yawn.
That’s what meant. A civil war is only called a civil war if the rebelling side loses. Otherwise it’s a revolution.
Technically true. The War of Independence WAS a civil war. It was a British civil war.
Goes to show that the victors write the history book.
Not if you set it up properly.
You can have your email hosted by Gmail or Outlook and still get flagged as spam if you don’t complete the exact same set up requirements. (SPF, DKIM, etc)
Harambee looking like Harambo in that link.
Well saying it’s hotter is just misinformation that wasn’t necessary to add then.
I did not expect that response when I saw a notification. I’m so used to the old place where dropping insightfull info is met with arguments.
😀
This isn’t true. Both 5.56 and .223 can be loaded to a variety of pressure specs. 5.56 being hotter is fudd lore due to it being the military spec.
The difference between the two comes down to how the neck of the cartridge is measured. The the 5.56 is rated to withstand a certain pressure…it does not mean it is always loaded to a higher pressure.
The reason you don’t want to shoot 5.56 in a .223 is because the cartridge neck doesn’t fit the chamber properly and the resulting incorrect headspace is what can cause a catastrophic failure …again it’s not due to the round being hotter.
Right? OP paid attention in math class but not in English.
7.62 NATO isn’t the same thing as 30-06. 7.62 NATO refers to a specific cartridge, not the bullet projectile itself. It’s the same as .308 Winchester. 7.62x51mm.
30-06 is 7.62x63mm
Hah, that’s a mix up of the two main cheat codes… IDKFA and IDDQD.