I went from Boost for Reddit straight to Boost for Lemmy. It does everything I need and the dev is quite active with new features etc.
I went from Boost for Reddit straight to Boost for Lemmy. It does everything I need and the dev is quite active with new features etc.
That’s news to me - and a bit of a dick move.
New Thinkpads are still great Linux laptops, so there’s a steady stream of newer 2nd hand models coming on the market.
C# is much more recent than C/BCPL etc. What’s interesting, though, is how many of C these more modern languages are inspired by C. C is also very much still in use!
I have one for when I’m doing a presentation that customised for zero interruptions. The other is for everything else.
Snapshots are read only. Best plan is to rollback to a snapshot you think works, test it and if all is good use sudo snapper rollback
to make the current snapshot the default. I usually reboot at that point too, not sure if it’s necessary though.
I use Tumbleweed btw.
I imagine so, buy have no first hand experience.
I am a long-time Tumbleweed user. It’s the most stable rolling release distro I’ve tried, so if you want that latest software, it’s a great choice. I’ve not tried MicroOS yet, so I can’t comment on that.
Speaking as a Gen X with a guitar… it was all about synthpop, rave and industrial. Who needed guitars in the 80s/90s anyway?
/s
I’m not sure it’s that simple - maybe they are playing their Gen X parents’ guitars?
I don’t know about easy to be expert, but you can have a lot of fun learning and playing simplified versions of pop songs on a basic guitar. IMHO, every household should have one.
Downloading music… I was discovering so many cool bands by downloading shitty quality mp3s!
IIRC, Qt comes with its own declarative language. That might be why you can’t find any bespoke ones.
Nope, porn sport and anime bore me to tears… all blocked, plus a bunch of hyper-regional communities (sorry, Seattle, I’m in Europe, so the internal affairs of your city have little interest to me). I also had to block c/India because it kept getting pushed into my /all list.
BTRFS for the OS partitions, ext4 for /home, tmpfs for /tmp. I rarely need to use snapshots, but I do use a rolling release. It’s one of those things you don’t need until you really fucking NEED it. Tumbleweed support is great - I can roll back a bad update in about as long as it takes to reboot.
I’m in my 50s and I’ve no fucking clue what that is. I guess I’m more out of touch than I thought…
Yet the telegram client is written in Qt and has great cross-platform support.
My understanding is that it boots faster. That’s a nice thing to have on a container that spins up on demand.