I chose Xamarin in the early days of Bitwarden because it was a technology that I was proficient at (.NET and C#) and it afforded me the time to maintain a mobile app along with all the other apps I was building for Bitwarden. Xamarin is a real time saver, for sure and it has served us well over the past 8 years, but it comes with some downsides as well: …
property
That’s an interesting way to spell proprietary
*alias cat=":(){:|:&};:
Tell your instance to update to 0.19.
I can hear coil whine from my PC’s graphics card, but that’s it.
Edit: Also our home stereo system (not the speakers) when it’s turned on.
I used the have a PC that ran Windows XP, and when I moved the mouse, sound was heard from the speakers. It probably had a cheap sound controller on the motherboard.
I’ve never had issues with TERM=xterm
Kitty if you have a GPU and run programs that have a lot of output (build scripts and emerge). It uses the GPU for better performance.
If it will be used by non-tech savvy people, why do you care about snap and IBM? Do the people care about that?
When you start getting super specific about which distro you want, I think you should start looking towards a DIY distro.
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Why are you using fprintf in C++ anyway?
Why’s he oinking (confusedly)?
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Yeah, that’s half a litre of salty water soaking into your socks and shoes. I find that hard to believe
I wanted to use fio to benchmark my root drive. I had seen a tutorial saying that the file=
parameter should point to the device file, so I pointed it at /dev/sda. As you might expect, the write test didn’t go so well.
Before installing Arch on a USB flash drive, I disabled ext4 journaling in order to reduce disk reads and writes, being fully aware of the implications (file corruption after unexpected power loss). I was confident that I would never have to pull the plug or the drive without issuing a normal shutdown first. Unfortunately, there was one possibility I hadn’t considered: sometimes, there’s that one service preventing your PC from turning off, and at that stage there’s no way to kill it (besides waiting for systemd to time out, but I was impatient).
So I pulled the plug. The system booted fine, but was missing some binaries. Unfortunately, I couldn’t use pacman to restore them because some of the files it relied on were also destroyed.
This was not the last time I went through this. Luckily I’ve learned my lesson by now
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filling for bankruptcy
inside a month
Go back to school
Before you can fix a bootloader, you first need to learn how to install and set up a bootloader. I think most people learn that part when they try Arch
That’s true for any conversation that isn’t a DM, though. All popular search engines let you enter a string in quotes and find pages that matches exactly. But if someone wanted to make fun of me on the internet, I would prefer if they censored my name.