I’m intrigued. How does that work?
I’m intrigued. How does that work?
Honestly, roll back to previous release for production and use best IDE your developers are used to on their local machines, test the fix in a non production environment then release to prod. When is editing business critical scripts in production really needed?
Same. Stage 1 install will forever be a core memory for me.
What are you contemplating switching from? Does your current OS meet those criteria?
Except it sounds like there are no elections for these new reps and people would be able to change their delegate at will whenever they want? But if it’s on a crypto-style ledger then it would have to either cost something (to prevent abuse) to change or be free after X period or on an election cycle. Definitely an interesting thought.
Sounds like you just invented Roblox.
It sounds like a Dockerfile for your system OS?
Light emitting diode (screens sewn on fabric) not lead lined 😁
Led clothing anyone?
This is dangerous to our democracy.
Maybe renewables is not the solution to our energy needs if it can’t scale up like we thought it could. Conservation of energy is not the answer. We as a society must find new, cleaner, sources of energy. Maybe AI can help us do it.
So AI uses energy, and it’s how we are choosing to provide that energy is destructive to the environment? So AI isn’t itself destructive.
50 GB for a BRD rip is one that is not re-encoded, that’s a straight rip from the disk.
Genuinely curious, how does it destroy the environment?
Shhh! Nobody tell them…
First OS - DOS 5.0 First Linux - Knoppix
The “article” reads like a drama. The dude has all original code and artwork and a different game engine. The screenshots show a very simplistic thing… you wouldn’t sue someone because their stick figures look too much like yours. If the game was copied that quickly there wasn’t much substance there to begin with imo.
I’ve heard both versions probably a hundred times each and only hear Johnny Cash’s voice anymore.
I’m a bit slow on the uptake there haha. I started with vi and moved over to nano at some point and never looked back. I can refactor code in production with the best of them. There’s still some tricks I’ve seen done in vi that amazes me that I haven’t tried to figure out in nano, but for the most part it’s fairly easy to use to do nearly anything in. Even supports color for supported files, YAML, etc.