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Switched after Louis’ video about it. Haven’t tried the voice yet, but just having swipe typing and suggestions again is a definite improvement.
Switched after Louis’ video about it. Haven’t tried the voice yet, but just having swipe typing and suggestions again is a definite improvement.
Yeah, but you need root anyways to mount disks (most of the time), so doing a quick chown
isn’t that much effort.
Edit: chown
> chmod
I use multiple subdirectories under /mnt for my fstab/systemd-mount managed disks. That includes local and network locations.
You can’t really install packages or modify configs on the host without root. Containers can only do some parts.
Maybe, but now I still need to remember the alias or distribute it to any machine I’m working on.
Not that difficult if you have everything managed with Ansible or similar anyways, but lots of people likely don’t have that setup.
As someone who speaks a language with gendered pronouns but no neutral option, this is very awkward to deal with.
As someone who writes bash scripts, fuck no, this is a terrible language and it shouldn’t be used for anything more complex than sticking two programs together.
Also, parallelism goes right out of the window.
Maybe you’d convince me with a real programming language.
I might try run0 for fun, but I don’t think it’ll replace sudo any time soon.
The biggest issue I see is run0 purposely not copying any environment variables except for TERM
.
You’d have to specify which editor to use, the current directory, stuff like PATH
and HOME
every time you run a command.
I think hate is really too strong of a word, dislike at most for me.
My biggest issue with Microsoft is a lack of trust. Apart from that, I just like my Linux setup more and find it easier to use.
Stuff I want to do works how I want to do it and how I’m (now) used to it.
Regardless, I use Windows at work, manage Windows Servers and Azure. It’s just how it is.
Because none of the projects you mentioned are GNU projects.
I’ve been brainwashed into finding Elixir interesting due to how it handles parallelism and good it’s supposed to be for live debugging. (According to ~3 talks I found on youtube)
You could download stressapptest and run that memory benchmark in the normal system.
I’m not sure how well the current version of Memtest does, but when I was overclocking I was told not to use it as it couldn’t reliably get memory to crash. (Funny problem to have). The two recommended tools are Windows only, so I found stressapptest as the best alternative.
I’d never heard of Transsion before, so I took a quick look on Wikipedia.
TLDR:
They sell mostly inexpensive phones in poorer regions.
Features of their phones are targeted for those regions, like Africa, where they have special features to calibrate camera exposure for darker skin, retain dual SIM and support many local languages.
In that case, maybe get a good textbook and follow the examples.
You hacked too hard
What happened in Gnome for them to merge so much stuff recently?
Is that a standard systemd configuration or something enabled by a distro?
Wifi works now, the wiki is out of date.
However, the Pinetab 2 does not have the screen layer for stylus support. See the FAQ
AFAIK they allow custom OIDC providers now.