[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 98 points 5 months ago

Mandriva is the new kid on the block. Real classic Linux users will remember Mandrake.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 71 points 9 months ago

Dude, it's common knowledge that NSA has contributed significant portions of (security related) code to the kernel. No tin foil hat required.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 74 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Sounds like your friend is absolutely not the target audience for a linux-based operating system. If he wants to play Windows games and use software designed for Windows, then he should be using a Windows OS. Anything else would be providing a suboptimal experience for him.

Personally, I've been using various Linux-based systems since 2004, as a software developer I use a lot of command-line utilities, and many tools and applications designed for Linux. If I were using predominantly tools and applications designed for Windows, then I would be using Windows. No need to make life more difficult for yourself and others.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 47 points 1 year ago

Your loop had a race condition, so we let the smoke out for you.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 62 points 2 years ago

Leslie I typed your symptoms into this box and it says you might have network connectivity issues?

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 41 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

It's not really a standalone file format, it's executable Lua code.

It returns a new item with the given table contents.

That syntax with the keys in square brackets is the "long-form" method of creating a new table, that's allows the use of spaces and dashes in the key name.

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34687498/what-is-the-function-of-square-brackets-around-table-keys-in-lua

Maybe this is the lua-equivelent of a python Pickle file?

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 39 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I've been using Alacritty for the last 4 years, it's kinda the opposite of this nonsense. It's written in Rust, it's super light weight, highly optimised, and uses hardware acceleration to render the terminal. It's top of the chart for every terminal performance benchmark conceived.

However, that lightness and fastness comes at a cost. There are some basic features they just won't add because they're outside the scope of the project. Eg, tabs ("just use a tiling wm and do your own tabs in the wm") or a scrollbar ("just use a shell with a scrolling screen buffer like Tmux"), or different coloured backgrounds for each opened window ("why would anyone ever want to do that?").

My holy grail terminal would be something like Alacritty, written in Rust, blisteringly fast and light weight, but with tabs, scrollbar, bookmarks, etc.

I find myself falling back to using Konsole a lot these days, it's got all the features I want, is fast enough, and already installed on every system I use Plasma on.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 54 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Every car I've owned has been used. Some are better than others. In general, I've had really good luck and have bought some great cars, but some have been money pits. You get better at spotting a good buy, but it's still possible to get a bad one, it does come down do luck.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 58 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

That's why upvotes exist. If somebody helps you, upvote their comment.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 91 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Kinda weird that it details how badly this affected the girls' mothers. The girls don't get a say, but won't someone please think of the mothers?!

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 83 points 2 years ago

That's what the two prongs at the top are for. Flip the caliper upside down, use the prongs to measure the inside dimension, and read it off the same scale.

[-] flubba86@lemmy.world 59 points 2 years ago

Every Lemmy update:

"We fixed some performance issues by optimising some queries."

Also: "To balance it out, we added some new even more inefficient queries."

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flubba86

joined 2 years ago