to avoid disappointment: It doesn't end... it just.... stops
as long as you don't have more than 32 accounts
yes, it runs in a linux vm, which wsl2 is. It's not running on windows. The systemd part runs inside the vm.
holy shit this had me in stitches. Even the issues page on github is in chicken, as well as the tags.
unless programming something math intensive like 3d graphics, then basic arithmetic and just a general intuition of numbers is more than enough.
with the process server singing him happy birthday
top right: view by category. switch that to classic and it's back to the same one of the old days
by selling me a license that lets me run their software on my own machine, not theirs. Like in the old times
Yes, a different cuestion usually has a different answer
going to "C:\Users\user\Documents" in explorer, vs just typing in "documents". One takes you to your documents folder, which will be empty, the other takes you to some other path from onedrive
~/code/$LANGUAGE/$REPONAME
this. put the sensors, audio jack, notification led, ir blaster back!
And fuck off with the ai!
heard of it, but never used it. Works really well with termux though
their "successful proof of concept" video was hilariously very visibly tumbling out of control
This chorded keyboard
the guy who invented the segway is still alive. The guy who bought his company later drove off a cliff, though it is suspected he had a heart attack while driving
on some sites the plugin fails to properly detect which fields correspond to which, true (usually when javascript fuckery is involved). But fixing that by manually pointing out the fields once on such sites is easy enough for me. I also switched firefox to use keepassxc for passkeys, which makes them actually portable and usable for me.
asking such an open ended question doesn't mean much when nowadays, more and more people consider "anything I don't agree with" to be hate speech.
Ai chips are bullshit. Having a chip to do your matrix multiplications instead of your gpu means nothing if you don't have tons of very high bandwidth memory.... which is the expensive part