For those curious about 1-bit computers, see Usagi Electric’s playlist:
Moved from @Crul@lemmy.world
For those curious about 1-bit computers, see Usagi Electric’s playlist:
Source: Help – The Jenkins
Yep, that’s why I added the twitter source too.
Source: https://www.commitstrip.com/2015/04/27/the-eye-opener-commit/
Also on twitter:
how tumblr works in terms of discovery
I really like Tumblr (mainly because RSS support), but I find their search VERY limited. Maybe I’m being stupid, but I haven’t been able to search for 2 tags at the same time (e.g.: “#artists on tumblr” and some genre “#pixelart”).
In general I find very difficult to filter repost and look for original content only.
Do you have any tips?
Photoshop on WINE can be made to work, but it’s a terribly bad solution for many reasons.
May I ask the main reasons? This is probably the most important point regarding my migration to linux and I thought that Wine would be a proper solution for Photoshop.
Thanks!
THANK YOU very much for your work!
Proxigram, from Instances - Proxigram - Codeberg.org:
If you get an error, try F5-ing a few times, it usually works at some point.
They also have RSS Feeds for accounts.
Something like this is what I imagine as a “bening version of the web3”. I’m not an expert (by far) on any of this, but from my limited understanding, the biggest obstacle in practice is the payment method. If we are talking about online payments, that (AFAIK) makes the legal aspect much harder. Leaving the payment outside the platforms may work, but that would make some parts much harder (traceability, accountability).
Source: dumb future: “@briankrebs They’re coming for…” - Hachyderm.io
I didn’t do anything special, just typed the correctly fomatted link (as yours).
It doesn’t work on bookwormstory.social either (pointed out here). Being it a new feature, bugs are expected.
Not sure if it’s a typo or a front-end rendering issue. But I see your link wrong. The correct one would be:
!pfefferle.wordpress.com@pfefferle.wordpress.com
For lemm.ee:
https://lemm.ee/c/pfefferle.wordpress.com@pfefferle.wordpress.com
I’ve been waiting for years for “non-destructive edition” (AKA smart objects). It’s a fundamental feature that I use (almost?) always as a first step. IMHO a lof of professional work is not practical without it.
They had it on the roadmap (see 2020 archive) for years marked as “No[t started]”. The current roadmap looks more promising with “link layers” marked as WIP and saying it could be available on GIMP 3.0.2.
LightDM says it’s a Display Manager.
I know that naming is hard but, oh my…, terms are so confusing when you’re starting:
… I’m still not sure which ones are synonyms, sub categories or independent components :/.
I’m an ultra-noob, so those who know more please correct me.
I’m playing with Linux VMs and recently I installed Debian to check it out. When it asked what DE I wanted, I chose all of them :).
The only hard conflict (AFAIK) is the [compontent / feature responsible for loging in] (I don’t know the technical term). Because each DE comes with a different one, you need to choose one.
What I found very confusing in practice is that I could see some DE apps and configuration settings from other DEs. So, unless you know what belongs to what, it’s a bit of a mess (in my VERY limited experience).
Oooh… I see. I didn’t understand how broad the Desktop Env really are. Is not that they manage “a lot of things regarding the desktop and windows”… is just like a bundle of apps.
Now it’s starting to sound like a sub-distro inside the distros, but I think this is a good point to stop bothering you. Thanks again!
So, just to check I understood:
Now… the next questions (if you have the patience :P) are:
Thanks for the answers!
Sorry for the off-topic question, but I’m still trying to wrap my head around basic linux concepts: you use “tiling window manager” and “desktop environment” as if they were mutually exclusive options. What’s the relationship between them?
Thanks!
AFAIK, they are used as relays.
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-bit_computing#1-bit
See also the playlist linked in the other comment with more explanations:
1-Bit Breadboard Computer - Usagi Electric (YouTube)