That’s an actual great point, noted.
That’s an actual great point, noted.
The title specifies that it’s the apps that are open source.
Turns out that is your experience, and it cannot be extrapolated to the rest of the world.
In fact, my experience is actually opposite. Everytime I go back to Windows to do some task… Wi-Fi has trouble finding my access point, and when it finally connects (sometimes after having to reboot) the connection is simply not as strong. Oh, and some bullsh*t software got reinstalled and it even set itself up as launching-at-start-up, after I had to almost hack the OS to allow me to do that.
So, do I extrapolate to the rest of the world?
That’s the thing, for me, it’s too much money every month for a one-time setup and maybe 15 minutes maintenance every 3 months. But if you feel it’s still worth it, go for it.
I think the standard is ~/.local/bin, for the people that like standards.
I understand. But that should make you automatically realise that you should give that old fat/broken laptop a chance to be plugged into your TV. Put a 10 $ remote mini keyboard there and no one will touch the TV interface again.
It’s in the official docs for zoxide, you are supposed to use the z alias, and many distros just set it up directly like that. I love doing z notes
from wherever I am.
I can understand if you want to pay. But don’t say it’s hard to block ads when all you need is uBlock origin installed… And that’s it. It’s literally a 15 seconds job for the rest of the life of your browser.
You’ll love zoxide
then.
Still no word suggestions?? Wow.
Anyway, Heliboard exists.
They won’t. They’ll just substitute them. The idea is trying to force every company do the same thing, as making people work locally makes them more dependent on their local company and less likely to jump to a better job.
Then you can lower salaries (not rise them) and destroy benefits. Also you can enforce dress codes to make it look like a dictatorship country like North Korea.
Is that American hand writing? It reminds me so much of James Hetfield’s, and basically no one writes like that in my country.
True Mexican food from an actual restaurant. For your health.
I’m sorry but I won’t bother switching to a ultra-minor browser for having to toggle something in the settings once every 2 years after 500 articles pop up about it.
It’s 100 % because they don’t really know if bikes can go on the roads it tells you. Their focus is clearly on cars, and they don’t feel comfortable in their guesses on bikes, specially considering that the risks of bad injury skyrocket if you ride somewhere where you shouldn’t.
The only broken thing is very specific stuff like Slack calls. In fact, it’s the only broken thing I’ve seen in a long while. Also fuck Slack.
I swear this question comes up everyday in Lemmy 😅.
Firefox, I just use Firefox because, it works, it has enough privacy measures, and everyone is looking at the codebase, something that cannot be said about most (if not all) forks.
Apple will support RCS in the next iOS 18, so maybe they can just wait a month.
Telegram client is the only thing from them that’s open, so I would stick to that as it’s where most eyes are looking.
I thought conventionalcommits.org was very well known.
I made my company use it and now it’s so much easier to navigate git history. We also get automatic, humanly readable changelogs for free.