The image is implying it’s 95% written in Assembly and that’s why it finished so fast.
The image is implying it’s 95% written in Assembly and that’s why it finished so fast.
And it’s not going to work because the Command Prompt was not opened as Administrator.
Why does it work in Windows though?
I have had an issue for years that I couldn’t pinpoint to a root cause (I’m strongly inclined to think it’s a kernel issue). I bought a CM Storm Quickfire TK keyboard with ABNT2 layout.
The issue is: every time I try to type any key that is not a letter or number one, the computer freezes for a full ten seconds before acknowledge the press and showing the character. Tried a bunch of Linux distros through the years and the issue persists. On Windows it works flawlessly.
Just give up trying to debug the problem, but I still have this hole in my heart where the cause of this issue lives.
It’s a vicious circle. Linux has no representation on the desktop because it lacks support from commonly used desktop apps. And lack support from those apps because it has no representation.
Windows have to screw really hard to push common folks to switch AND Linux must come pre-installed on cheap desktops to appease young people that are entering the ecosystem now.
OS are tools, you use what fits your workflow better.
Not knowing it was impossible, he got there and did it!
It just has to work enough.
At least none of it is WIP…
I use Google Domains to create custom email addresses on the fly that syphons to my personal Gmail address.
If I subscribe to a service, say Netflix, I just put netflix@mydomain.com and it automagically exists and redirects to my Gmail.
That’s a pretty relevant take in this context. Thank you!
Windows gives you the option to kill on shutdown if the app is trying to delay the process. I think it’s ideal.