downside that made me move from debian:
dist upgrades broke all the time, because I had software installed from PPAs.
downside that made me move from debian:
dist upgrades broke all the time, because I had software installed from PPAs.
My IDE can do that for me. And it was able to do that pre AI boom. Yes, the code ends up more verbose, but I just collapse it.
So from a modern dev UX perspective, this shouldn't be a major difference.
GrapheneOS sometimes sacrifices privacy for security.
I had way more privacy related features and controls on a rooted LineageOS phone (which was obviously much less secure)
There is probably no out of the box solution, but if you want to give it a go and hack it together, this combination might work (or it might not, I don't think anybody tried yet)
https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-webtop
&
Huh?
I've been running radicle for a while to sync my desktop and mobile calenders without any hiccups ever.
Not op but I've looked at the examples for 15minutes out of curiosity and I still have no idea what the fuck they mean by that.
Sorry for the link dump - I just glanced over the content and it seems like this might help you:
https://www.warpbuild.com/blog/docker-mirror-setup
https://medium.com/@shaikrish27/deploying-a-docker-registry-mirror-as-a-container-59565ff92c48
https://blog.alexellis.io/how-to-configure-multiple-docker-registry-mirrors/
the window rules one really fucks me up.
It stopped working at the beginning of the year for me and nobody gave a shit about the bug reports.
Now I have to keep juggling windows and their sizes every day like a caveman.
Income from Steam is what ultimately made gaming on Linux viable. And to do that, they made significant open source contributions.
So I'll keep giving them money of course.
Depends on the career path. Some need only the very basics - for example in frontend development, you'll mostly use % and basic +/-.
tbh. Most of the useful programming related knowledge you'll learn at yoyr first job, not at uni.
The curriculum sometimes will force you to learn something unrelated to your career and it has multiple purposes:
People learn the fastest in the topic where they already know a lot. And the slowest where they know very little.
Learning stuff outaide of your comfort zone literally works out your brain. You learn to learn. And your thinking becomes more flexible.
You should not become somebody who is only good at one narrow singular task and a complete idiot at anything else.
You never know if it becomes useful later in life. So I suggest still trying to do your best at any topic. And studying more for the exams where you are not as proficient.
As to which career path to go for:
Don't be afraid to change midway, but make sure that you enjoy it. If you enjoy compsci, keep at it. (Or if you have student loan, put some more thought into the cost of switching).
Thats great!
But I think we need to look at it from the perspective of somebody migrating from GitHub. If OP is used to the GitHub GUI and uses it extensively in their workflow, they will probably be very frustrated while trying to do the same on sr.ht .
There were no flatpaks a decade ago.