No, the best thing to do is put it back where you got it from.
No, the best thing to do is put it back where you got it from.
What’s your experience with people who have both?
Fascinating, I hope to see more research on this in the future
…because person has hoarded over 2,000 times what multiple people earn during their lifetimes and continues to hoard more and more…because person takes personal visits in their private plane that cause more pollution than 500 average people in the same wealthy country, who are also polluting too much. She’s a better person than Musk by a mile, but she should still be shit on for her bad behaviors. As should all of us when we’re wasteful
This is what I do. A pi with Kodi or Jellyfin or similar plugged into HDMI is fine, it doesn’t matter what OS is on the TV if you’re never using anything but the one input.
Wheels are pretty cool
Factory patterns are horrible, because they mix config into program code, maximizing uncertainty when debugging
I’ve always hated factory patterns because I find them unintuitive, but I couldn’t articulate why I find them that way or even organize the reasons why in my head. I just recognized them as a frequent source of annoying debug sessions. I envy your ability to concisely convey something like this.
regex101.com has a convenient searchable cheat sheet for all the somewhat odd but powerful functions like negative lookbehind/lookahead with a brief explanation of each, a regex pattern input with checkable boxes that helps you get down single replacements vs global replacements, a large input that lets you dump text to test against the pattern, an explanation on the right of what each symbol is trying to match, and the left side lets you switch between the different flavors to see some of the variants between languages/standards. I still have a lot to learn before I’ll consider it mastered, but I have enough common stuff memorized now that it works great for me!
Oddly having several variants rather than a standard despite “regular” being in the name: everyone I work with eschews regex but after finally taking the time to learn more than just the basics of it a few years ago I find it so incredibly useful almost daily.
I thought those were skiing or biking or local terms I just didn’t know since I’ve never being skiing or to Whistler, haha. I read EL rather than ei like thinking it was referring to a place everyone from that area would know that started with those letters. This makes much more sense now.
What is breaking, and what is El?
Fascinating, truly the best of all Zealands
Y’all have interesting names.
This is ultimately what made me try out Betterbird. It has regex searching which imo every search box of every app should have as a basic feature. Plus it still has all the features Thunderbird has and even some that Thunderbird has removed in recent releases.
Np, I’d be interested to hear about other people’s experiences with it, good or bad.
I’ve been using Betterbird for a good 6 months and it’s the best email client I’ve used, it’s what Thunderbird should be out of the box. With the Proton bridge app running in the background it integrates very well.
I consider it not a real color, just a sick joke our brains play on us. I also think it’s an ugly color though, and hate that so many modern applications use it as a main color and don’t allow retheming to something pleasant like blue or green.
Tiling window managers like i3 may be what you’re looking for
What does culture war bullshit mean?
Average national cost of gasoline per gallon in the US (monthly average) first went over $3 nearly two decades ago. Today it’s $3.07. The July 2006 average of $3.025/gallon would have the purchasing power of around $4.75 in today’s dollars. What are people really thinking they should be paying for gasoline in a world that needs to be moving AWAY from using fossil fuels?