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deleted by creator
Also excited for this. I tried KDE before but I didn’t find it easy to configure (too manually for a declarative guy like me). I like more the simplicity of Gnome.
This is the real problem.
Ehm… Elliot uses Gnome.
Gitlab used to be cute, small, and innovative (as in open). But now it’s too bloated. Gitlab CI is not well designed and half-baked.
Second. Up-to-date packages and stable at the same time.
I actually prefer that—a simple messenger without gifs and stickers, just plain text.
I’m not promoting WhatsApp in this case though. It’s one thing it’s done right, besides end-to-end encryption.
Cool. Now I just needs a Japanese keyboard and I can finally ditch Gboard.
What’s so special about hyprland? Why is it getting so much hype?
Welcome to the endless civil war between Linux distros.
Nvim < Emacs + Vim keybindings (aka evil
).
Emacs will be there for you, once vscode Windows gets abandoned.
FTFY.
Just the matter of taste. For some users who want to get to code quickly, they use VSCode without the hassle. For some power users who want to have extreme extensibility, they use Emacs/Vim.
I hate Google but they gave us Go, Kubernetes. I hate Amazon but they gave us AWS. I plainly hate those companies, but adore the brilliant engineers that work there.
Nowaday I have ChatGPT spew me command. I usually do a quick validation before running. Nevertheless, most of simple operations are correct so I don’t need to.
I then note the command to my persional gist cheatsheet. Next time, since the command is “cached”, I’ll be able to be productive quicker.
So much better than googling.
This. I’m tired of all short responses that don’t want to discuss the problem or steer the topics to a direction.
True, on my feed there are too much posts from “Meme” even that I don’t interact with it often. So I unsubscribed the community. Maybe I would consider subscribing it back when the recommendation system is a bit better.
The ability to rollback is indeed awesome. And it’s built-in. I think you can do it in Arch-based distros but requires additional config.
AWS (Route53 specifically). Not common but my personal lab runs on AWS so it’s nice to have a place for everything.
Classic Chesterton’s fence principle.