I like this a lot. I’m not sold on the idea of “Basic” just assigning you a server automatically, just philosophically. But answering a few simple questions and then being presented with a list of relevant servers feels like a nice middle ground.
I like this a lot. I’m not sold on the idea of “Basic” just assigning you a server automatically, just philosophically. But answering a few simple questions and then being presented with a list of relevant servers feels like a nice middle ground.
I’ve been using Protonmail for a while now and it’s only gotten better.
Interesting! So instead of creating a network share and opening files in that folder in VSCode, I can simply SSH into a machine through VSCode and edit the files on that machine?
I’m also curious about this – there’s a usecase I have that I think fits, but I’m not sure if I’m either barking up the wrong tree, or overthinking it.
What I’d like to do is open up VSCode on any of my computers, make changes to files, save them, and see those reflected when I open VSCode on another PC.
I suspect VSCode container is meant for people who are actually developing and running their code and need an environment catered to that.
Am I better off doing something like saving my files to folder on a network share and then just opening that folder in VSCode on each PC instead? Is that even possible?
Finally had a chance to try this out and it’s super simple and exactly what I was looking for. Thanks!