You definitely don't live in the USA.
@Neil The time when you don't think that things will work but surprisingly things work out the planning of your extra consideration.
CMQ: What word should we make for this? Or, what is the word for this?
@Neil so-so news: i can use my monitor while the power button has failed.
If you are just doing programming, a monitor is just a money-waster.
Like, a Raspberry Pi doesn't have a monitor attached.
It's a perfect example of a modern programmable computer that doesn't employ a built-in monitor.
It also has the advantage of being extremely cheap!
Okay, I stand corrected. You can buy a monitor from the Raspberry Pi website.
You could program in the ENIAC without a single monitor. Actually, we don't need monitors; just a set of one-color LED lights would suffice as an output for a program.
But, without an Internet connection... you can't possibly submit your programs to CGCC.
I'd love an OS that starts up and opens up a Try It Online interface with a "Submit to CGCC" feature. It makes programming easier.
It's in dark mode and you can't change the interface based on your preferences, but that's sufficient. TIO is like that.
The "Submit to CGCC" feature is better console-based; that way, you could avoid seeing the dreaded CGCC interface in the OS.
How do you chat though? Write a program that prints the last 20 messages in your desired chatroom, and then write a program that posts your message to the chatroom.
You'll probably get a chat suspension because you're a bot, since you're basically pretending to be tne Try It Online server.
And then people will say, "What? Try It Online is behaving abnormally!" They can't use Try It Online anymore, they have to download the physical interpreters.
Because, you're using all of TIO's resources yourself!
Dennis creates 100 sites with the same content to avoid your abuse.
And then, you port your Try It Online based operating system to 100 different operating systems.
Then, you got 100 users using your operating systems exclusively, each person using a different OS.
Dennis gets confused. "What is eating up all of my server's resources?"
In fact, it's all of the 100 test users of your operating system that created this problem!
You and your users' TIO accounts gets suspended by Dennis, due to abusive behavior of preventing other people from using Try It Online.
Meanwhile, people have downloaded every single interpreter locally into their computer. Their 1GB memory computer can't fit so many interpreters.
As a result, doing that creates a disaster among all of them. You know what disaster that is, since you have an ominous feeling about the smell of overcooked metal.
Therefore, every single person on the globe can't download intepreters. They had to use your operating system to access Try It Online, due to various problems resulting from being unable to install Windows or Linux.
Which made you a lot of money, of course.
And since a single programmer is capable of using up all of TIO's resources, Dennis had to create 60 billion copies of the TIO website.
Fortunately, Dennis's bot already does it for him. You make these sites Operating Systems and issue them to every single person on the globe.
And then, you know, 60 billion people use the Internet all at once.
As you all know, the central server is a server made by the W3C, used to connect every single computer in the world.
That server is protected severely by the W3C, and if anyone broke it, consequences will arrive onto them.
The central server of the Internet has broken down. W3C has to rebuild various internets to fullfill their needs.
During the emptiness, some people became mad.