No, that makes perfect sense. Thank you for explaining.
I like hearing about other people’s environments, because it gives perspective.
Living 20 minutes into the future. Eccentric weirdo. Virtual Adept. Time traveler. Thelemite. Technomage. Hacker on main. APT 3319. Not human. 30% software and implants. H+ - 0.4 on the Berram-7 scale. Furry adjacent. Pan/poly. Burnout.
I try to post as sincerely as possible.
No, that makes perfect sense. Thank you for explaining.
I like hearing about other people’s environments, because it gives perspective.
Just out of curiosity, how often do you have to run pip install
?
Now if they could just help defuckulate the Pypi search problem.
It’s written in Rust.
All jokes about the Rust Evangelism Strike Force aside, various parts of the industry are finally starting to think that “If it’s written in Rust, we have less to worry about with respect to that thing, so we won’t torture the devs and force them to sneak it in the side door anyway.”
It’s a thing that I’ve been seeing at work for the last few years.
It’s worth trying.
Looks like he wants to get the gaming community on his side. Clever.
Most of it. There are still a small handful of “open source is worthless, forget about it” holdouts in this particular problem space.
Open a ticket, the rest of us will jump on and +1 it.
For whatever it’s worth, Netcraft’s January 2024 survey says Nginx is around 23%, with Apache coming in second at just under 21%.
https://www.netcraft.com/blog/january-2024-web-server-survey/
A little bit later than expected, but overall a good thing to see.
My guess would be half that. Six years at the outside.
Atlassian, too.
Without knowing the make and model we can’t really say. A lot of laptops these days have their sound hardware integrated with the motherboard, so there’s no “subboard” to replace.
That said, for things that are not integrated there are one or two options: Remove a screw and pop it out of an M.2 slot and install a new one, or remove or a screw or two and lift it off of a friction-fit connector.
I use ulogger-server for this, with ulogger-android running on my phone sending it updates.
Slack v3.0 in '95!
Remember the six CD sets from Walnut Creek?
Slackware. Just before I started college I was sent the list of baseline requirements for comp.sci classes. Windows 95 or Windows NT, Visual C++, and a serial connection. I didn’t have the money for '95 or NT; I was still using an 80486 with four (just before moving on campus, I traded up to eight) megs of RAM and wasn’t in a position to get a new box (though I did drop pretty much my entire discretionary budget for the next two years into a one gig hard drive, which got me all the way through undergrad). However, there was a BBS in my NPA called Monolith, which was basically a Slackware Linux box with two dialup lines running homebrew BBS software. The sysop let me download the boot, root, A, D, and N disk sets (one floppy at a time - it took weeks) and helped me set up a basic Slackware machine. Once I got up to school I was able to set up a serial connection (and later, talk the building into lighting up my floor’s ethernet lines). The rest, as they say, is history.
I didn’t know Audacious was still being developed.