There’s intel as well. Probably a few other small players. Is Matrox still around?
There’s intel as well. Probably a few other small players. Is Matrox still around?
Because the instructions, “draw a brick here, a pipe there, here are the rules for how jumping works, etc.” are smaller than “these pixels are blue, that one is orange, that one is white, etc.”
What a confusing headline.
Is there any reason this 5% number still holds true? Back in the days of 40 MB hard drives it made sense to make sure the system didn’t totally run out while root was fixing the low disk situation … but these days even 1% is still several gigabytes of space, not likely to run out that quickly.
It means that everything will be in equilibrium, and there will be no such thing as hot or cold. No energy to move from place to place to create the idea of hot or cold.
So I guess that means that it’d be cold but the concept would be meaningless.
Yes… I’d classify context as a reboot of latex.
I’d say only open/libreoffice fits that.
Edit: maybe Tex/latex/lyx too, but context is not.
There are many instances like that. Systemd vs system V init, x vs Wayland, ed vs vim, Tex vs latex vs lyx vs context, OpenOffice vs libreoffice.
Usually someone identifies a problem or a new way of doing things… then a lot of people adapt and some people don’t. Sometimes the new improvement is worse, sometimes it inspires a revival of the old system for the better…
It’s almost never catastrophic for anyone involved.
Probably, yeah. Depends on a few other things (drive age, SMART test results, how risk-averse you are…)
But at least it’s worth thinking about.
There’s a lot of options for which key to use for compose. And you can set right-alt to be that key very easily.
laser printers can print color but it’s a bit expensive up front.
Semi-embedded shit like this is always astoundingly outdated.
Please do not kick me in the vas deferens.
What the fuck is a labtop?
Maybe this? I’ve never posted an image to Lemmy before.
I prefer to quote Prciness Leia
No software should EVER touch any DNS related configuration
Uhh good luck with that. If it were stored on magnetic media I’d suggest “a magnet and a very steady hand” but that doesn’t work so much for SSDs.
/srv is for “site-specific data which is served by this system.”
How to interpret that is up to for debate, but it seems clearly to be “user files” as opposed to “system files”. “Served” is a bit ambiguous but I don’t think it really requires that it be made accessible with an application service.
Basically I’d treat this as a location to mount/store your non-personal data such as music, videos, etc that should be accessible to anyone using your system. It could be network-exported as well but doesn’t have to be.
/net is for files imported from the network.