![]() This video displays my predictions for tanks in the new patch 7.3.5 - how tier 21 will impact each of the tanking specs and how the tank balance could look in Antorus raid! KEEP in mind that there could be a tanking balance patch released before Antorus and it would impact my rankings in the video.įaov's Paladin Thoughts for Antorus (T21): Discusses the viability of (Blood Death Knights | Protection Paladins | Protection Warriors | Brewmaster Monks | Vengeance Demon Hunters | Guardian Druids) tier 21 and provides rankings based on the tiers and class changes! ![]() Discussion & predictions video about the BEST TANKS in legion FOR PATCH 7.3.5 Describes what could possibly be the best raid setup for Antorus, the Burning Throne (normal | heroic | mythic) raid. ![]()
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![]() ![]() In general, I have noticed that this washed out effect is a matter of insufficient luminance instead of chrominance. It is only meant to be a convenient and easy hack to bring your display back to a reasonable display quality when using the Windows 10 desktop environment. Note: This tutorial is not intended for display purists. The quickest way to resolve the post HDR washed-out effect is to adjust the HDR brightness to maximum and install an ICC color profile for your specific monitor. For myself, this is too much of a pain, and I decided to work on a solution myself that would avoid doing this. ![]() One common solution I found was toggling the HDR mode every time you wanted to view HDR content. After looking around on the internet for solutions, I was surprised to find very little in the way of something that actually worked. ![]() I recently upgraded my monitor and noticed that HDR looked washed out when I enabled it in Windows 10. ![]() ![]() Let’s clear up a few misconceptions, shall we? People get confused with the mix and match process more often than you think when applying these permissions. ![]() NTFS permissions ‘mechanism’ hasn’t changed and still raises some questions every now and then. Let’s jump right in…Īlthough the basic shared folder functionality has evolved slowly over the past few years (especially with the introduction of Server 2012 not too long ago), the whole share vs. Although I’m not the first to touch the subject and I’ve also seen and read multiple blogs discussing the matter, I think we can still find new ways around this predicament. I’ve seen multiple medior and even senior admins struggle with this, and unfortunately it’s not as ‘basic’ as everybody thinks. ![]() Not a new topic by any means, but still definitely one worth mentioning. It’s so easy to get lost in the share vs NTFS permissions maze, especially when the two get combined creating shared folders, which is the main focus of this article. ![]() ![]() Even if we assume half a liter, about the size of a commercial water bottle you'd find for sale at a deli or pizza place, is an appropriate serving size of the average potion, then even tiny cauldrons, when filled with potion ingredients, would make at least a dozen servings of such a thing. Even the small ones for personal use, as far as I can tell, can hold a lot of liquid. Whether it be witches standing over a cauldron big enough to boil someone alive in and stirring it with a big stick, or more reasonably-sized personal cauldrons in, say, Harry Potter, potions are very, very frequently being brewed in these bulky, thick metal pots, to the point that some people don't realize they ever historically saw mundane use. Potion brewing is almost inexorably tied to the image of a cauldron. Rather, this is a general point of curiosity that occurred to me while brainstorming my story. ![]() This isn't a question intended for any specific setting. ![]() |
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