Two partitions for a live linux, the second for home and other data. It can come in handy, if you’re on linux.
Two partitions for a live linux, the second for home and other data. It can come in handy, if you’re on linux.
And manufacturers to make it unlockable, pretty please?
“induces neuroplasticity” sounds to me like you’re easier (or at all) able to re-learn. In your words, enables rewiring.
Split up the monorepo?
Plastic can only be recycled so much. Burn the too low quality to generate energy? Could get rid of a few oil power plants instead, there’s enough plastic swimming in the sea.
Not OP but since MS stole winget, i refuse to use it and use scoop and Chocolatey instead. They have more packages too.
I just got a standard Mini-ITX board with overspecced VRMs and a PCIe slot in the end. Good enough. At least it can sleep and behaves as expected.
I see one 4-pin, a 3-pin(?), a 8-pin and multiple 9-pin connectors.
ADMINISTRATIONS PASSWORT EINSTELLEN!
DA FEHLT EIN BINDESTRICH!
Or better training, so people don’t hate them. Though, there is laws too.
Again?
Time flies, where a HDD is barely enough to run a minimal Linux.
More like soldiers than their army.
They’ve a (small) army
On hire.
You can of course not give users a choice. And a lot of applications do their own thing, having their own variables like GOPATH
or a cli option like --config
or some way to do that in a config file like Idea IDEs. But implementing XDG from start is miles simpler for all parties, it’s good practice to have your paths and variables somewhat organized in code anyway.
In this case it would be XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/home/config
. That simple.
This standard makes your software’s paths user-configurable, giving users a choice.
And i wish there was a separate XDG_LOG_HOME or $HOME/.local/log, with logrotate preconfigured to look there.
Wait, this is allowed?