Elections Trump for POTUS mega thread

here is the owner of that international fast food behemoth, the largest fast food corporation in the entire galaxy, oops, i mean the owner of that "small business" that donold mcronald did his staged photo op at yesterday, bitching to the labor board about having to pay his employees a living wage, because according to him, paying his employees anything other than minimum wage would "hurt his employees."

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between the owner being a slave-riding penny-pinching douchebag, the place not being able to pass a health inspection because nobody washes their hands, and allowing a guy with no foodsafe credentials to come and handle "customers" food without even washing his hands, i don't even know who would want to even pretend to work at that festering shithole.

but hey at least it's got some publicity, and any publicity is better than none i guess. i'm sure all kinds of trumpanzees n the area will be going there for some hamberders, and if they're lucky they won't get sick, or get a taste of cock when they take a bite into their big mac because of the last minimum wage employee who doesn't wash his hands or give a shit about his job.
 
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That's also impressive learning the C/C++ and getting the different systems to work functionally together. Almost sounds like a PS5 now lol. Some hackers use PS5's jailbroke along with digital currency mining. Is slackware the flavor of Linux you used along with RedHat? I don't recall hearing slackware. Also why didn't you stick with that ?
Slack was really the first distro at the time came out of Berkley that seemed to be a huge Unix hub at the time. You could download Slackwear if you had a decent network connection or order on CD. It could fit on one CD around 500 meg. Had pretty much all you need to setup as a server it even had a desktop manager. Red Hat came out shortly after with a much better graphical interface out of North Carolina. But Berkley BSD was king in the 80's early 90's and almost everything was developed off of that except for big IBM boxes and some crazy AI machines yep back then.

"
The Berkeley Software Distribution or Berkeley Standard Distribution[1] (BSD) is a discontinued operating system based on Research Unix, developed and distributed by the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley. Since the original has become obsolete, the term "BSD" is commonly used for its open-source descendants, including FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and DragonFly BSD.

BSD was initially called Berkeley Unix because it was based on the source code of the original Unix developed at Bell Labs. In the 1980s, BSD was widely adopted by workstation vendors in the form of proprietary Unix variants such as DEC Ultrix and Sun Microsystems SunOS due to its permissive licensing and familiarity to many technology company founders and engineers. These proprietary BSD derivatives were largely superseded in the 1990s by UNIX SVR4 and OSF/1.

Later releases of BSD provided the basis for several open-source operating systems including FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, Darwin and TrueOS. These, in turn, have been used by proprietary operating systems, including Apple's macOS and iOS, which derived from them[2] and Microsoft Windows (since at least 2000 and XP), which used (at least) part of its TCP/IP code, which was legal.[3][better source needed] Code from FreeBSD was also used to create the operating systems for the PlayStation 5,[4] PlayStation 4,[5] PlayStation 3,[6] PlayStation Vita,[7] and Nintendo Switch.[8][9]

Mach Kernel was the bases for the most amazing OS at the time BeOS . It could run on anything pretty much and had the best UI and programming libraries. It was multithreaded and multitasked but left hanging without a company to implement it.

"
Imagine you’ve worked for years to try to create a better way to write software, and now you’ve finally succeeded. But nobody wants to use it. What do you do next?

This is a question I’ve thought about a lot over the past few years. I’ve tried using a variety of programming languages and frameworks that purport to make software development better—and I think they do! But most of them haven’t caught on, usually resulting in them struggling to be maintained. Seeing this play out time and time again, I have to ask myself: Is it worth it to try to make software better? Or is my desire for software to be better a desire that will inevitably leave me disappointed?

This question came to mind again as I’ve been setting up a vintage Macintosh to run BeOS, an operating system developed in the 1990s. I’ve really been getting into vintage Macintoshes lately. I used Macs as a kid, but now I can do things I wasn’t able to afford as a kid, like buy 1995’s most powerful Macintosh to run "

Ran on PC's, Macs, servers , Digital Equipment Alphas an such.
 
Haters gonna say it’s fake.

Wait till he finds this out.
"Most NFL owners support Republicans, despite a big contribution from the wife of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ owner to an outside spending group that backs Obama"
 
Wait till he finds this out.
"Most NFL owners support Republicans, despite a big contribution from the wife of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ owner to an outside spending group that backs Obama"

Wait till the owner finds out that actual “Steelers” in places like Pittsburgh back trump. Boy will his face be red!

 
Wait till the owner finds out that actual “Steelers” in places like Pittsburgh back trump. Boy will his face be red!




are those the same fake union workers that donold mcronald bussed over to michigan last february to stand in the auto plant that he paid $20,000 to rent for a day and hold up their "union workers for trump" signs?

he's got quite the entourage. they wear hardhats to rallies. cute little tv props those are. the rest of the people there should be wearing helmets at all times.
 
After Trump’s “stunt” I literally took this picture at my local McDonald’s. I have never seen energy like this

GaYKvsEWMAAeXoE
 
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