Is that from the Microsoft engineer or did he start from this observation?
I try to contribute to things getting better, sometimes through polite rational skepticism.
Disagreeing with your comment ≠ supporting the opposite side, I support rationality.
Let’s discuss to refine the arguments that make things better sustainably.
Always happy to question our beliefs.
Is that from the Microsoft engineer or did he start from this observation?
It seems to trigger discussions like yours, so it’s good, a forum is for discussion.
But at least you know you’re a bad boy and Santa will know too.
Windows phone on Nokia Lumia was pretty good and well polished, and I’m a Linux fan.
Didn’t FB use some shady practice to make their users fall into Threads without noticing?
Arch is about managing the system as a hobby, which is fine.
Only the installation takes more time, maintenance is no longer than the noob friendly ones.
The git based AI he was secretly programming will take over and anyone who can’t use git submodules without looking up the commands will die.
(Pure) Debian is almost never recommended for noobs, I don’t understand the discussion. People would usually recommend Mint for Windows users.
Does it work when you had two windows opened? Does it reopens both or only the last closed one?
I don’t understand this thread, this is exactly what I’m talking about in my OP.
Just checked, it appears ctrl+shit+T will also reopen a window if the last closed tab was on it.
Because I’m continuously using them when I work, it’s emails, calendar and chat. They always stay there, the rest varies.
That’s last closed tab, not window.
Edit: actually it will reopen a window too if the last closed tab was on it.
I’m using the app Screenshot with a delay on Gnome.
Good point, flatpack wasn’t widespread when I tried Debian as a workstation years ago.
Debian is sometimes frustratingly out of date for daily apps like the web browser. I’d rather recommend something with a bit more updates like Mint.
Or with creating Microsoft offices in their cities, like they did with Munich.