(maybe the python version helps convince a few people it isn’t malware?)
A screencap on peertube would convince me it does not blow my ears off.
(maybe the python version helps convince a few people it isn’t malware?)
A screencap on peertube would convince me it does not blow my ears off.
I’ve never tried it myself but Grist looks like it could fit your needs.
It was a known bug, I assume it is fixed now that Linus merged it.
Curious too. I tried running bcachefs last year and with the combination of compression and encryption everything ended up corrupted very very fast.
and this has led to a rampant monopolisation of the init system.
You will be shocked if you find out that virtually every distro runs on the same kernel. Pure monopolisation! For the freedom to choose!
Gnome. Feels most polished and least cluttered to me.
C C C
Gosh, I love and hate C.
It’s a good question though why there are so few Spanish speakers here (or at least visible).
I think one reason is the large number of German users on the Internet. With around 100 million speakers, German is the second most spoken native language in the West after English.
According to the application texts, many users seem to come from various podcasts. We are also “endorsed” by one of the largest German-language subreddits on its front page (r/ich_iel). Our users have also started to watermark their memes, which occasionally attracts new users. Feddit also made it into an article in a popular IT magazine (heise).
Yes they do. Microcontrollers contain a microprocessor that is optimized for branching instructions and already include memory and peripheral interfaces which are connected directly to the processor bus (opposed to general purpose CPUs).
Gnome Boxes is also great for simple stuff on Linux. Besides there is virt-manager as GUI for libvirt. On macOS UTM is a good free and open source tool.
Fedora is a great distro for development (used by Torvalds himself ;-).
If RAM is a problem you could try using ZRAM. Unlike the name suggests, this compresses data in RAM instead of swapping to disk, so that more data fits in there than normally available. Fedora for example uses zswapzram by default with a value of max(0.5*RAM, 4GB)
but can be configured to utilise more.
EDIT: confused zswap and zram
Might FreeCAD be an option?
I don’t feel like this is true anymore. Many distros do not ship vi(m) anymore but only nano.
I recently gave it a try after seeing dessalines recommending it. It is pretty cool but years of vim muscle memory won’t go away so easily :D
So basically GNU style formatting?