![]() ![]() If he hits you, he’ll knock you off the mountain. Avoid this rolling Goron by staying on the left side. Once you get up into the large area, head to the right side of the flag. Once you’re done talking to him, round the corner and continue upward. It was sealed by none other than Ganondorf, the fiend! The boulder behind him blocks the entrance to Dodongo’s Cavern, the Goron’s main source of tasty rocks to eat. He’ll inform you that he is of the Goron race, one of many on Death Mountain. Make your way up the area until you get to a large, cracked boulder where you can talk to the rock-like creature next to it. If you have trouble, just avoid them or use Deku Nuts. As long as you time it well, you can defeat them incredibly easily. Once they jump at you, hit the B button without moving the analog stick to perform a vertical slash that will hit them in the air as well. Simply target them and wait for them to come towards you. This area has several Red Tektites, a jumping foe that come after you if you get too close. ![]()
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![]() ![]() This is a crucial moment, a crucial song, for Southern rap overall, for rap music overall as a business, as big business, as the biggest business imaginable. “Make ’Em Say Uhh!” was the 1997 breakout hit from one Master P, born Percy Robert Miller, who rose from the Calliope projects in New Orleans to self-made multimillionaire superstardom as the colonel of his very own No Limit Records. Below is an excerpt from Episode 10, which explores the rise of Master P and No Limit Records with guests Micah Peters and Taylor Crumpton. Follow and listen for free exclusively on Spotify. But what does it say about the era-and why does it still matter? On our new show, 60 Songs That Explain the ’90s, Ringer music writer and ’90s survivor Rob Harvilla embarks on a quest to answer those questions, one track at a time. ![]() “Wonderwall.” The music of the ’90s was as exciting as it was diverse. ![]() ![]() We knew that the submitted data had duplicates, somehow, and this was throwing duplicate record exceptions in the API. We put a bunch of diagnostic scaffolding into the deployed executable this provided a number of clues. ![]() Like all difficult bugs, it was impossible for us to replicate. It happened when the user clicked the OK button on a specific form. ![]() Recently, we had this strange problem with a particular smart client application at work. ![]() |
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