Every once in a while, you can refresh your memory by reading the man page.
Or if, like me, you use Emacs, Magit exposes everything quite clearly.
Other places in the Fediverse:
Every once in a while, you can refresh your memory by reading the man page.
Or if, like me, you use Emacs, Magit exposes everything quite clearly.
emacs
On my own system, but usually for remote work I use Vim as it’s easier to make usable
Perhaps you can encode them as computation (i.e. a function of arbitrary precision)
Slowly?
(Don’t forget Israel!)
A good password manager encrypts your passwords with your own master password (and if you don’t trust them, use an open source one like Bitwarden)—so, even if it gets hacked, your passwords are not immediately compromised. You should take even more measures, like using 2FA such as your phone or a physical key, which basically makes you invincible. Way better than remembering passwords.
About that last point, you don’t really need to. Internet people like to show off their customized desktops and systems, but in reality using a “just works” distribution requires very little headache and time. Except for the time spent choosing it, that is
Mailing list! (/s… unless?)
And Lemmy/kbin obviously
Didn’t it only recently get generics? How was stuff even done before then?
Look up function pointer types to make this language seem even more insane
Have you read Discworld?
Not really, they’re based on gematria like Hebrew numerals. α = 1, β = 2, γ = 3 and so on
People have different opinions on how packages should be managed. Of course, there are some package managers which are very similar to each other (DNF and zypper have the same backend), but they can also get really different (Nix/Guix and pacman are basically completely opposite in philosophy). It comes down to preference, and you can’t force anything.
This war really makes you hate Britain (and possibly France) for causing unrest in the first place
Isn’t the Windows exe also a renamed zip?
“They’re pushing”? Who’s “they”? As far as I could see, it’s an unchecked option.
In any case, what’s the historical reason for mouse wheels actually working like they do?
Fine, but, like, don’t recommend Vivaldi. Also, if you disable the Brave ads, you’re not really supporting them, while still getting the benefits.
— Sent from Librewolf
Stick to one of the major distros, not some little-known derivative. Also, please avoid Manjaro, it’s horribly broken, and Ubuntu, because snap. It essentially just comes down to how you want to manage your packages.
Edit: VirtualBox is fully supported on Linux, but QEMU/KVM is better.
Does anyone know how the amount of information is actually derived? The article just says “researchers calculated”