
How interesting! Does this apply to alcohol/other “recreational” drugs too, then, or only sedative ones?
How interesting! Does this apply to alcohol/other “recreational” drugs too, then, or only sedative ones?
Cool? But the original screenshot was about the US perspective, so the point needn’t be made here
To be honest, I think I prefer the Emacs one due to how absurd it is: https://youtu.be/urcL86UpqZc
But all of them are hilarious.
Helix is “it just works” but it actually does, without having to get lost in the (config) sauce.
It’ll be unstoppable once they finalize and ship the plugin system.
Edit: and I haven’t even mentioned the descriptions above commands, the command palette-like functionality in <Space-
, nor the tutor yet. It’s just so much more beginner-friendly.
The Unix principle of piping between two or even multiple programs, together with “all data should be in the simplest common format possible” (that is, largely unformatted strings), was a really clever invention to be popularized. As proven by the fact it is still so useful decades later on a myriad of computers unimaginably more powerful than what they had back then.
It’s not perfect by any means (alternative title: why something like Nushell exists), but it’s pretty good all things considered I dare say.
- Traffic
- Remote (app) features
- Music
protein folding
We’re at the point where, due to how b2c tech services work, I think a lot of people think AI === LLM
Thanks for these explanations, that makes a lot more sense now. I didn’t even think to consider browsers might be using something else than an off-the-shelf implementation for image/other file formats…, lol
Honest question, since I have no clue about web/browser engines other than being able to maybe name 4-5 of them (Ladybird, Servo, Webkit, Gecko, … shit, what was Chromium’s called again?):
What makes browsers/browser engines so difficult that they need millions upon millions of LOC?
Naively thinking, it’s “just” XML + CSS + JS, right? (Edit: and then the networking stack/hyperlinks)
So what am I missing? (Since I’m obviously either forgetting something and/or underestimating how difficult engines for the aforementioned three are to build…)
I only learned that this was a thing like literally two days ago!
C# is basically Java and from what I can tell, this looks approximately valid.
Variables can always* be named freely to your liking.
*You used to have to stick to the Latin alphabet, but that’s increasingly not the case anymore. Emoji-named variables FTW!
not sure WHAT the Roman one is holding
Spoon and fork, duh!
Thanks! I’ve only known the on-device installable Adguard apps until now (which obviously won’t work for something like roommate’s Apple TV, for example), so this is new stuff to me. Interesting!
Does Adguard work on “smart devices” like a TV?
Why does it compare against $1
for the string match? Wouldn’t kudasai
be at the end of something like $*
?
No kitty graphics protocol? 🤨😔
At this point, TOML is my favorite since it basically amounts to an attempt at standardizing the .ini
/.conf
style of config “language”/files. It’s still simple enough, but pretty powerful, and was seemingly good for the Rust and Python projects to be convinced to choose it as a default…
- Port numbers only go up to 5280, the number of feet in a mile
What about internationalization – do the European port numbers go up to the cm or only meter count within a kilometer?
Server (Linux) and personal machine (non-Linux Macbook) with the same general shell config (aliases etc.), but different applications/CLI tools installed.
No idea how it compares against the Nix paradigms, but I like the ease of use in setting up a new machine. It’ll copy all files to their intended destinations and will be able to fill in credentials from templates using e.g. rbw
(third-party Bitwarden, i.e. password manager, CLI tool), meaning, once all fields have been templated, you can make it public without even worrying about leaking a personal email address (I use different ones for git vs. other accounts vs. even other stuff).
You misspelled “then giant companies buy up all the housing on the cheap and everyone continues to be miserable”