I’m going to guess Fairphone 5, based on the battery saying “FAIRPHONE 5”.
I’m going to guess Fairphone 5, based on the battery saying “FAIRPHONE 5”.
But your whiny and lazy ass is better?
If you object to people expressing their displeasure, you don’t need to throw a fuss about it.
Seconding Everything. Being able to search for text inside of files has been a godsend.
Good for them.
If you want ULTRA budget, I’ve used this cheap ass keyboard daily for 4 years now: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07CLYNW78/
I’ve beat the crap out of it (literally, nodejs be frustrating af sometimes), but it’s still good as new. Some of the switches I’ve swapped out for Silent Black since my newborn was sleeping next to me at the time, but the original switches all work fine. It’s got all the RGB bells and whistles, but I leave it on white.
No shit. I’m saying the tools I had to make myself should come standard instead of wasting dev time on command line bullshit.
Making a little program that opens a window with some buttons to pin to my taskbar is infinitely easier than digging out docs and copy pasting into a command line every time I need to do anything. Paste the command once, done. It’s like 10 lines of code, plus about 3-4 for each command I add. Maybe drag the window a bit bigger when I add the button.
I’m anti everything that requires daily use of arcane command line bullshit. I thought we were on the way to being over that when Windows 3.1 came out.
If it needs to be done more than once, make it a button on a little program. I’ve rolled my own for any of them that can be triggered from the windows command line. But Docker and others that require their own unique command line I can’t do that. I wouldn’t be as annoyed by Docker if Docker Desktop just did all the crap it should instead of requiring command line bullshit every damn day.
I really want to make a “closed as duplicate” joke about yet another billionaire being stupid and tanking their site.
You can use it offline as long as you load it up before going offline.
Photopea runs completely in your device, just like Sketch or Photoshop do. It does not upload any of your files to the internet. You can load Photopea.com, disconnect from the internet and keep using it completely offline. None of your files ever leaves your computer.
Not literally, though. Whoever reads this, you can do better.
Back in my day, MS-DOS let you use
HELP
on QBASIC commands.