I’m going to assume they don’t include the gunpowder
I’m going to assume they don’t include the gunpowder
Yikes, people here are brutal to people with differing viewpoints, heh.
Doesn’t seem to matter how knowledgeable in the subject matter the person may be either.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Because they don’t know better.
To quote the mighty GabeN: “Piracy is a service issue, not a price issue”
Or so they claim. We can’t really verify their implementation though.
If you have an android phone, you can plug it in via USB and enable USB Internet tethering, which will give you working internet access on your machine to do the Wi-Fi debugging with.
He says so in the readme
This is awesome!
In the future, if you ever get tired of maintaining it, remember that todoist is a great app with home assistant shopping list integration on day one!
In my experience, it’s both. I’m watching a friend of mine go on the apps and she got over 2000 likes (I’m not even exaggerating) in a week. When she sorts through those she first reacts to the main photo, and then looks at their job, and the rest of the profile.
So in order to get matches as a guy, you need to have your life together with a stable job, an interesting personality you can somehow convey in a profile, and good enough looks for that to matter.
It’s because they’re a privately owned company.
The pressure for enshitification mostly comes from shareholders. Without them, the company can actually think about their long term future and decide exactly when and when not to increase profit.
I tend to avoid proprietary things whenever possible these days, but I found most things by small, privately owned companies are pretty good towards their users.
So, if an application crashes on your device, you’re okay with it never getting fixed because the developer has no idea it’s a problem?
Not if Google’s web DRM thing goes through
They didn’t create Flash. They bought a company called Macromedia who had created Flash.
If you install docker desktop, it uses WSL by default. Might be easier than configuring everything manually.
The sad part is that it used to be simple. You could do apt install whatever and it would usually get it.
They also used to have a graphical frontend for apt, which felt like an app store before app stores (and even the iPhone itself) existed.
I suspect it’ll get simple again. If canonical doesn’t do it, some other distro will overtake it.
Apt does not have most packages you need anymore. You have to add custom repositories for everything. Which means you have to go to a website and still run a whole bunch of commands. Worst of both worlds. Other distros are not as bad, but between snap, flathub, etc. Linux package management is not in a good state at the moment.
I’m going to assume whoever is hosting the service can’t view your surveys and results.
Nightlys are not things you should recommend for production use. Especially for (potentially) non tech savvy teachers and students.