

I mean, there are history videos for things that are 1-2 years old too that are there to sum up everything known and explain things to people out of the loop
I mean, there are history videos for things that are 1-2 years old too that are there to sum up everything known and explain things to people out of the loop
I would rather use Snap than Docker
Fuck Docker and their bullshit pricing schemes
It very highly depends on the application
For something used daily that’s more or less true
For something that needs very complex configuration like specific ffmpeg transcoding rules and cmake build files - you’d have menus that are 5-10 pages long and full of super detailed selections and forms, while in reality you’d only want to switch on or off one thing, so it would be easier just to write the command
When I made my small game engine I had a second window full of settings that I could change dymamicaly. After like 2 months of work it was so full of settings it was very hard to navigate even with all subdivisions and layouts properly made
Also, GUI apps often lack specific or new settings for the terminal app they’re built on
They probably meant that GNU holds half of the Linux desktop usage, and Chrome OS the other
Of course, but many, many companies never leave that state in the age where the biggest investment strategy is dumping hella cash into a startup in hopes that it overtakes (monopolizes) the industry but may never be profitable. And many people thought that Tesla would never be profitable, it sure looked like it for a very long time.
If I recall correctly, Tesla was actually cash-negavite for like half a decade after Musk bought it, surviving off investors and SpaceX’s success, I remember it was very big news when it finaly went cash-positive and subs like WSB were all over r/all
Most probably not, at least in my programs I’ve never made a flag, because my delays are usually no more than 3 seconds anyway
I’m pretty sure it’s either a myth (that it doesn’t work) or some US-centric thing, because when I worked as a delivery guy, I used to go through probably hundreds of different elevators in high-density residential buildings, and most of them have doors that stay open very long to allow baby strollers and heavy appliances to be placed inside, and on pretty much all of these the door closing button works, immediately closing the door
This is what I and many other programmers have done (not the removal, but fake delays), because it improves user experience, actually:
1.When the user clicks a button that should take long in their mind (like uncompressing a zip file etc) but is actually fast, it might seem like something is wrong and it didn’t work
2.When the user transitions between layouts of the application, if it loads everything too fast it will look too abrupt, a fake delay will be made here if a transition animation is not possible/doesn’t fit
The source is satire
Used it every day when delivering, because there was much more detail than google maps, so I could actually see where fences and gates are. Used Waze to drive and OSM to walk.
Weird, all the sanitizers I’ve seen have a big ass label that says “non-alcohol” on them, both sprayed and gel-like
LinkedIn is the very bottom pit of hell of mainstream social media
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Well, seems like in this case it’s relevant if publishers really don’t like it when AI learns on their data.
I’m gonna help you with the first paragraph. Google the definition of “consent”.
I remember one time a guy was trying to add SDL (a programming library) to Visual Studio (code editor and IDE), and said that it wouldn’t link to a project no matter what he’s done. You can google how to do this in five minutes, with video tutorials and everything, it’s like a basic thing every programmer does in that IDE. Like 5 question threads later, turns out he was “following all ChatGPT steps” and they were all complete nonsense, just random functions of Visual Studio done with the filenames of SDL.
Yeah, like, how do you even help someone in two minutes?? They probably just see “oh, it’s a bot” and leave
If they asked what distro, they know the btw meme for sure
Yeah, but Teams in Office? Is that really the main problem?