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Most jobs I’ve had in the last 15 years have asked me if I want a Max or Windows PC. I’ve had Linux boxes at most of them as well, but not as the primary machine.
Most jobs I’ve had in the last 15 years have asked me if I want a Max or Windows PC. I’ve had Linux boxes at most of them as well, but not as the primary machine.
Yeah, that’s a big limitation.
Oracle is awesome in this one specific way. They suck in all other ways but this is really good.
https://github.com/OpenPop/notes
You’ve sent me down a nostalgia road with your mention of Populous. Here’s what I found, and I’ll be digging into tomorrow.
Yeah. 2 things stop piracy, a fair price and quality content. We don’t have either.
RobRenz is awesome. If you like him, you probably watch Joe Pi also. Really nice people.
I got a digital camera that only took blurry pictures. This was Merrill Lynch in the 2000’s.
It’s literally a reskinned chrome.
Chuck Feeney. He gave away everything to charities.
Edit: it was around 8bn.
During setup, tell it you want to join a domain. This brings you to local account creation. Way easier than what the article says. They keep moving that around to make it harder to find though.
I use portainer, and when I deploy an image, I write a short bash script for it.
This lets me easily do updates. I have a script for each image I run, it’s less than a dozen. They’re all from public repositories.
It’s really true!
This is seriously not a bad approach.
It’s versatile. Swap 5 and 6, and it still works.
Mid 50’s, northeast US, yes I can. I don’t but I used to.
Combined, the best advice in the whole thread
I think that e-ink is better for books, and tablets are better for magazines and comics. I like the feel of my ebook, it has very much the same kind of feel as a paperback. The larger format of a tablet is great for magazines, and being able to pinch and zoom is useful there too
For most things, Linux just works. There are specialized apps like cad packages, graphic design and such that are very problematic on Linux but most of it is fine. Just look at how successful Chromebooks are. They’re all Linux.
HP is just the poster child but lots of the manufacturers are scummy.
Homebrew is a really good idea. You can get amazing results for relatively cheap investment. Take a look at the Robobrew and similar all in one kits. They’re basically brew in a bag systems that work really well.