You could use a hot glue gun. If you ever need to take it off, isopropyl alcohol will cause it to unstick without any damage.
naonintendois
Salaries are a tiny fraction of the military budget. Majority goes to overpriced military contractors. I think the bigger issue is the Pentagon has failed 6 audits in a row.
It likely is. The browser UI is also really old.
You should also check out git commit --fixup ...
paired with git rebase -i --autosquash ...
. you specify a commit target to the fixup to say you want to fix that commit with the code you're currently committing. It will create a fixup commit at HEAD. The auto squash will reorder your fixup commit and mark it as a squash so you have way less work to do.
The plug is becoming a standard. There are still many more stations needed to increase EV usage for people who live in apartments or doing road trips. Not everyone is relying on them for providing charging. It's sad that they're the only ones who actually maintain their infrastructure
I'm not at all experienced in fixing these but some ideas come to mind: I doubt it's the spring, that would just control rotation of the main rod unless it somehow bent the rod. Could be the tracks on the side are becoming misaligned. That could be from loose track. That might be hard to tell with the door installed due to weight, someone might know of a way to check this.
You also might need to consider that the floor underneath is sinking on the gap side. Are there any cracks in the garage floor? Any cracks on nearby walls? This can happen naturally or due to a leaking pipe where water underground washes away the supporting sand/dirt under the building.
Glad I'm not the only one who thought that!
Looks like shorts on top? Likely flipped the image from OPs perspective to give a better looking photo of the cat.
She comes
It shouldn't break if you just install packages from the main app installer. It's more of a concern if you're trying to install anything from source.
Also make sure to try a live cd or live USB to make sure the OS is compatible with your hardware. VM is not sufficient for this last one. This is usually only an issue if you have very new hardware.
I would get comfortable with the idea of breaking things. Make regular backups of your data. The best that I'm aware of for making it easy to work backwards from breaking things is NixOS, but I wouldn't consider it beginner friendly.
You learn a lot from trying to bring a system back online. But it depends if you're trying Linux to learn it more or just to take advance of privacy.
You would spread it across the MCU. I'm not sure what the best way is to keep it perfectly smooth though. You could hide it with electrical tape if you really wanted to (is that what you mean by slicing tape?).