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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 4th, 2023

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  • Because it all connects together, and you can program them jointly to help solve tasks.

    Having email and version control inside emacs makes it easy to set up an email based patch system.

    Of course this system will then benefit from the existing code highlighting, introspection, and an integrated debugger.

    Integrating it with your time planner means you can automatically add commits to your journal as a way of tracking what you’ve been working on.

    The old joke always was emacs is a great operating system, it just needs a good text editor.

    The real downside for me is everything is just a little bit janky. It all almost works perfectly and the code is right there to fix it, if you can be bothered. Generally I can’t.















  • (Swiss)Germans are completely mad about food.

    It’s their culture to complain about everything, except food. All they care about is that it’s as bland as possible and has big portions. If you manage that, they’ll give you five stars every time.

    I spent 3 years living in Germany, and not only can you not get anything spicy for love nor money, they also don’t use herbs. It just blows my mind. They’re physically so close to France and Italy, but the food is so far away.




  • Honestly, if you’re sharing office files you’re probably using office 365. This means everything is a web app first and therefore Linux compatible.

    I tried using the desktop version of word on a Mac last week, and the latency was so bad on a shared document that I had to switch to the web app anyway.

    Basically, if you just want to use Linux you’ll be fine. If instead you don’t want to use Microsoft, you’ll probably have lots of problems.

    Microsoft have been brutally effective in getting their tentacles into academic institutes, and you’ll find that everything from email to logging into internal sites relies on an office 365 account.


  • This is going to massively depend on which country you live in, but frequently neither.

    Parties can pick who they like, but they often allow politicians and party members to vote as part of internal selection process.

    In the UK only weirdos and political extremists are party members, and the Tory party tends to spend a lot of effort trying to stop their members from having a vote.

    So of the last four prime ministers.

    Sunak didn’t have a vote (lost to truss before that).

    Truss won an internal vote.

    Johnson won an internal vote.

    May was uncontested.

    And this is only the internal vote. All of them became prime minister without an election. Generally you vote for a party (some pedant will claim you vote for MPs, but they do what the party says) and then the leader can change while they’re in power.