![]() In my case my configuration.xml file looks like that (disclaimer: I am running the Office Insider builds, if you don't want to do that you need to replace that section. ![]() So if you meet that requirement you can simply add that switch to your configuration.xml file: A location that contains all the product and language files for the architecture that you are changing the installation to.At least version 5.33602 of the Office Deployment Tool from the Microsoft Download Center.At least Version 1902 of Office 365 ProPlus installed on the device that you want to change. Support the installations of Microsoft office 32-bit.If you are deploying Office 365 pro plus through the Office 365 Deployment toolkit you can now automate this experience and add a new switch to your config file. Till April 2019 you had to manually uninstall the 32bit version of Office first and than install the 64bit version. While at first many people think this is a bad idea due to all add-ins I did the switch last weekend and it was a very smooth and friction free experience. ![]() Microsoft started to recommend its 64bit edition of Office 365 pro plus to be installed as the default Office installation.
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Also remember that such steel would have completely different functions - the things that they would share would just be the need to be very light. Therefore, it would be extremely unlikely that exactly the same kind of steel would be employed simultaneously in swords and armour. Also - and we're sticking with real history here, of course any author is free to invent their own metallurgy rules for their universe! - different masters would create armour, and sword makers would most certainly not spoil their delicate fingers in doing armour. Such techniques for forging swords would probably be useless for doing armour. ![]() Japan, in the Middle Ages, did not trade directly much with Europe (and most certainly they wouldn't be selling their Samurai swords!), or the Europeans would think of Japanese swords (assuming they could use them for fighting at all, since they also require special techniques to wield, unlike European swords - basically, point the sharper end towards the enemy and hit him with it ) ) with the same kind of reverence that the inhabitants of Westeros talk about Valyrian steel. Even today, the ancient art of forging traditional swords has not been lost, and there are still masters doing them, exactly like they have been made in the past such masters are still revered for their forging skills, and the transmission of knowledge to an apprentice is still enshrouded in mystery, secrecy, and religious rites. Such techniques in Japan were sacred (involving many Shinto rites) and passed very ceremoniously from master to apprentice (and apprenticeships would be very, very long), and, as such, there would be an almost mystical aura involved in those swords. I'm no metallurgist, but the actual Japanese blade is more like a 'steel alloy' - a combination of different kinds of steel welded together - than a single kind of steel. The Japanese dealt with those by employing several different steel types. This would be consistent with a technique that is primarily used for swords and/or edged weapons, since besides lightness (to make them easier to swing), you need to avoid brittleness, you need hardness for the edge, it must be flexible to an extent but not too much, you should be able to polish it and etch it with designs (for aesthetic reasons), without, however, endangering the lightness (polish/etch it too much, and you ruin the sword), and so forth - an impressive amount of different characteristics that are usually mutually exclusive. Also, Japanese traditionally used several different kinds of steel in producing the famous Samurai swords the actual workmanship of such a sword (even today) is incredible, for the sheer number of processes involved in doing the whole sword (and not just the blade itself). ![]() )īesides that, I always imagined that Valyrian steel shares the characteristics of Japanese steel in the Middle Ages which is tempered steel made of many layers, by repeatedly folding and hammering on the steel that will produce the blade part (see ). Valyrian steel, although being often quoted as being 'far too rare', nevertheless seem to be found pretty much at every armoury in Westeros. ![]() Performance Grand Theft Auto V and Grand Theft Auto Online The truck comes with extremely knobby tire treads and impact struts, which begin suspended at the center of the truck and continues down to the wheels, with the suspension blue shock absorbers and its corresponding springs exposed. ![]() Unlike the Sadler, the Sandking XL does not feature the F-series signature "dip" along the beltline near the mirror.Īs the name suggests, the Sandking XL is a full-size pickup with an extended XL wheelbase, which is also a lifted off-road variant of the Sadler. The split headlights take cues from numerous generations of Chevrolet Silverado pickups. The design, overall, is strongly related to that of a third-generation Ford Super Duty, with some design cues from the first and second generations, such as the tail lights.
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