sudo format /q c: && apt install debian
Nice!
I’m a worldbuilding consultant and fanfiction writer for the Pokémon fandom, also work with computers ‘n’ stuff. Linux user (but not Arch, btw).
I have a Mastodon btw as @VeniaSilente .
sudo format /q c: && apt install debian
Nice!
As a comment in Youtube about the Aang vs Ozai video said, more or less: “There’s Avatar, and there’s the military movie about blue cosplayers”.
See? CEOs get criminal liabilities! Capitalism works!
(/s alas)
This. Sometimes a software is just finished. IRC itself has not seen change in like… about all the time I remember.
“The shareholders will now decide your fate”
“Your cat has been delivered” – USPSPSPSPSPSPSPSPSPS
Starting up wikis is so easy nowadays that there’s no excuse. I maintain a few Dokuwiki-based ones, it’s my preferred engine for simple wiki stuff, but Mediawiki (the same one that powers Wikipedia) is not bad either and not really too difficult, just a bit more demanding storage-wise. Heck, you can currently fire-and-forget DW-based wikis on SDF’s “one payment” access tier, even! Probably on Neocities too, haven’t checked.
Sounds (heh) good in theory, but so far it hasn’t been able to pick any radio in my country (Ar) or nearby. Inspector says any attempt to load a radio ends in a HTTP 403 error.
Protip:
Just don’t have a live Windows partition.
Okay so, lemme see if I understand, these animals all biogenetically modified themselves, at species-wide levels, to be able to eat both meat and plants? Even the ones who are philogenetically obligate carnivores?
Because if so, there is one philosophy / ideal that I’m not seeing reflected: “I’m not a cat [ / dog / whatever]. That species was molded by millions of years of history by their need to hunt meat to survive, their skills, body shape, prowess, all relies on such a fundamental inter-species relationship in nature remaining fundamental. So, if I was made to not need to eat meat, before being born to boot, I was forcibly deprived of an important part of my identity before I was born, all to placate a social norm. Thus, this society is built wrong, and I must fight to fix it / make it pay.”
Pretty nice, “failed to capture Primal Groudon and the world ended up like this” vibes!
To be fair (and this is something I don’t recall being established with or dealt with in the video) you need to at least trust that the backend is there. Currently if “lol CIA AWS” servers are not working, you don’t have an option (Advanced Settings or whatever) in Signal to choose another provider, such as say a self-hosted community server.
68 men plus the driver makes 69, amirite?
I need the Chile’s 9/11 edit of this, pronto!
This is what capitalism prevents us from achieving! True catness!
Didn’t even know you could do the debug addons thing! Thanks! Hopefully this info helps more people.
One would think that Firefox would have a command somewhere to re-export the currently installed extensions. Useful for migrations, replications etc.
I use SQLite to power up lots of stuff I’m working on. It’s lightweight, fast, simple and well-documented for small projects — like a Postgres but very local. Saves me from having to deal with containers “just to store data”, let alone for moving stuff to other machine where I would also need the permissions to configure and run containers in the first place; whereas all you need to pass SQLite databases along is scp
/ rsync
.
Firefox ESR is basically the LTS of Firefox. Over a portion of the normal (“stable”) Firefox’s release cycle, ESR will get security fixes and backports, but nothing that changes interface or expected UX behaviours. It’s basically there for keeping an environment that is consistent and predictable over a reasonably long term (~1 y) which is why it’s the Firefox version that gets shipped with eg.: Debian.
In general, ESR is the default version I install for anything clients-wise that for some reason requires that we don’t intervene client machines too much (including maintenance). It’s fire-and-forget once you have the usual extensions rolling like uBlock Origin.
Memory wise it’s also quite reasonable in its usage and I’ve found it’s far more responsive to customization of in-RAM memory usage patterns than stable, nightly or develiper Firefox, who tend to ignore or misinterpret my requests such as “only use up to 16 MB of cache in RAM”.
One part where maybe ESR is too conservative is the HTML / CSS lexer. Because it’s intended to stay stable over very long periods it gets stuck with stuff like still not accepting CSS :has()
, and it seems the next ESR won’t support it either, whereas Nightly does already. Also, because behaviours are retained as long as possible, bug UI breaking changes such as the migration off Australis or the incorporation of the Extensions Button are a more jarring clash in ESR than in normal Firefox, because you get all those workflow-changing changes in one BIG update.
“We” are not polarizing ourselves. We are just describing a polarization that already exists to opress us. Be it ACAB, ALAB, whatever you find, the thing is, it just is.