Solve today’s Wordle in an instant—just scroll or click straight down to today’s answer. Prefer to take your time? No problem. You’ll find a hint on this page to help you out if you need it. Everything you need to solve the #627, March 8 puzzle is right here.
The trouble with finding a lot of common letters, especially when they’re coming up as yellows, is that there are a lot of places for them to go. Luckily for me, a green popped up not too long afterwards, and with a little swapping around, today’s answer fell into place without much fuss.
Wordle hint
A Wordle hint for Wednesday, March 8
You’ll need to think like royalty to uncover today’s answer. This word can be used to describe majestic or opulent settings or items fit for a king or queen, or a king or queen themselves acting in a dignified and royal manner. You’ll need to find two vowels to win.
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Is there a double letter in today’s Wordle?
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Due to storage limits on the GeForce Now service, Nvidia recommends players on the service limit the number of manual saves they make in Baldur’s Gate 3, and also place limits on the number of autosaves and quicksaves the game allows in settings. Apparently you could run the risk of saved data loss should you smash F5 too often.
“Nvidia is aware that some users may experience data loss due to the storage limits. We are working to resolve the issue,” a warning message on GeForce Now says.
“For now, users should limit the number of manual saves to prevent saved game loss. You may also limit the number of Auto and Quicksaves to 10 via game settings: Options -> Gameplay -> Save Option.”
You still have save files to play with. Enough for a little save scumming at key moments, I’m sure. Though it could require a change of tact for players that are looking to reverse any catastrophic events that might happen with extremely regular quicksaves, such a…
Chipmaking is tough. Like really tough. Just how tough? An engineer could spend many hours talking about the intricacies of just a single step in the lithographic or packaging process and you’d come away wiser but moderately terrified about the scale of the accomplishments required to create any and all computer chips. But a photograph speaks a thousand words, and these photos of Intel’s new lithographic ‘High NA EUV’ machines make it quite clear how incredibly complex this whole chipmaking biz is.
What you’re looking at here is a lithography tool (just one, incredibly) called a TWINSCAN EXE:5000 High NA EUV. This $370 million machine offers Intel the new ability to scale down processors into more efficient, effective designs. ‘High NA’ stands for High Numerical Aperture. ‘EUV’ stands for Extreme Ultraviolet.
The wider chipmaking industry has been adopting EUV to allow for more continued advancement of chipmaking. Previous DUV lithographic processes only go so f…