I’ve not heard it pronounced, but it seems some here are verbalizing it as lee-bruh. In my head it’s always been lee-bree which is just an awkward pair of syllables.
I’ve not heard it pronounced, but it seems some here are verbalizing it as lee-bruh. In my head it’s always been lee-bree which is just an awkward pair of syllables.
I think Libre in general is an awkward sound for me
No, it’s open source and on GitHub, that’s just the best resource for knowledge on getting it and associated tools running well on Linux.
I would recommend obs-livesplit-one
Yeah the important thing is it’s inclusive or, both rules can be active simultaneously
You can do 1 day or 2:1 ratio
I wasn’t able to figure out how to run it on any lemmy instance
I believe this is simplified to open
on most platforms
Terminator
Winget would have been a better one here
It’s probaly Lua
I would probably find a way to move to files to a better file system than ntfs for use in jellyfin
Even without WSL it’s basically the same portion of people using windows and using linux for personal use.
Arc is a neat browser I might try out if it weren’t Mac only and chromium based.
I think Tabby is a similar project, but personally I spin up and throw out terminals very liberally. Tabby had a horrendous launch time, something more than a second which constantly bothered me while trying to work. I’d love to see how quick this is though!
I use individual files with some like-services grouped together, but you interface with specific services withing a compose file by just specifying the name at the end o the command
There are some niche features Mozilla refuses to accept like WebSerial and WebMIDI, but they’re starting to come around on them.
But never both at the same time
I don’t imagine express is wireguard under the hood but that’s a pretty common wireguard configuration method.
It was mostly just a skill issue, I don’t know how anyone uses developer tools on Windows. Building tool chains on Linux just make sense.