Good old Scunthorpe problem
Good old Scunthorpe problem
Guessing from other comments, looks like annoying and unusually common issues using Matrix
On the Reddit thread people, at least one of them tagged as a KDE dev, mentions that widgets NEED to be able to run arbitrary code. I am absolutely baffled by this.
A good idea i have been spreading around relevant people lately is to use ShellCheck as you code in Bash, integrate it in your workflow, editor or IDE as relevant to you (there’s a commandline tool as well as being available for editors in various forms), and pass your scripts through it, trying to get the warnings to go away. That should fix many obvious errors and clean up your code a bit.
No matter how many constraints you add, it’s never enough, that’s the weakness of a model that only knows language and nothing else
Heh, had already boosted, liked and bookmarked it, nice! 😄
It hasn’t happened much, but i’ve loved the few real life versions of this strip that have happened with people posting it as a response
As one of the very likely commenters that falls into this i’m sorry, but fuck the reddit administration, i left them nothing. Hopefully you might find an archived version of the answer.
Gave a quick check, and it costs more than twice the price to buy it in EU, everything from Pine64, for some reason, odd, will look at this in more detail later at some point in case i missed something because the idea of an open, not locked, not tracking your every move smartwatch is appealing, but that doubling the price thing is a minus.
Heh, this is interesting
Pretty much this, they don’t deserve hate but i won’t recommend them either
Nope, for that use this one, which is also in Debian-based distros and Docker
For great justice?
Centralizing the web is how we got into the current mess, very much no
Randall also had a followup t-shirt, now out of production:
“Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no”. This is no exception.
Meanwhile sysadmins:
It’s not
Because it too is part of the Fediverse
There is, and there always will be issues, this is not going to change, much less in Linux where the hardware manufacturers are many, many times offering zero help and less documentation, but they pass, they’re fixed, and things advance and improve all the time. This happens in every OS. However we’re almost certainly safe here from changes done just for the sake of profit (with extremely rare exceptions which get fought back by the community, I’m looking at you, Canonical!), so I’d say we’re MUCH better off on this side of the fence.