Wow, no need to make this personal. /s
Wow, no need to make this personal. /s
But you were already going to vote, right?
The problem is that we need a candidate that draws in people that either weren’t going to vote or would vote for someone else instead.
I did just order one to replace my MacBook, so I’m interested in hearing from others as well. The upgradability was a big plus for me beyond being able to have a mobile Linux machine for dev work.
Yeah, lack of XWayland support has been an issue for me. Versioning the config API is something I’ve been considering, or at least ensuring backwards compatibility.
I’d be interested in other ideas or pain points you’ve experienced. Not to suggest I’ll ever have something production-grade, but my hope is to get to a point that I have a working daily driver and potentially share it with others.
There’s also Strata, Niri, and to some extent Cosmic. My problem has been that they tend to be very opinionated and limited in the customization of the layouts. Having used XMonad for a long time, I may be a bit spoiled in that regard…
I do think there’s a middle ground for configuration without requiring programming skills, which can be off-putting for many users. After all, most layouts are just a combination of rows and columns. 😛
I actually started working on one a few weeks ago. It’s amazing how easy it was to get the basics working. Still a long way to go, but it’s a fun project in the meantime and hopefully can result in something that supports my desired flow.
I think a more apt description would be proxy cards. It’s relatively new, but it lets you create cards that are linked to your primary without ever issuing a plastic card. This way if fraud happens you only need to replace it for the services it was used on. Or if you happen to lose your physical card, you can have it replaced without affecting the others.
I emailed my bank about this a few years ago. Never heard back but to my surprise they actually updated the password restrictions! I should send another email asking for MFA and virtual cards…
I’m not sure what’s worse. The engineer that thought this would work or the company that doesn’t do code reviews.
Sounds like someone has Perl Traumatic Stress Disorder. 😉
Squirt me some tunes, bro!
Somehow god is all-knowing, but forgot to consider the loopholes.
Not quite what you’re looking for, but I use the CachyOS kernel on Arch. Mainly because it’s optimized for the architecture. Not sure if there’s actually any real performance benefit…
While it’s not definitive, this was the easiest list I could find: https://www.farandwide.com/s/cities-michelin-stars-397433fb73604a91
SF and NYC are also in the top 20.
Not quite the same, but I switched to buckwheat pillows. This way you can shape it to fit however you like no matter the position. Takes some getting used to but solved my issues with most pillows. Sadly it also means no more pillow fights…
If done right, he could probably pull off the entire Cosmere.
You’re assigning rmdec
to the output of sed. It should work if you wrap it as you did with i1xmr
.
This is the closest I could find: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40279-022-01649-4
I don’t have any recommendations, but have seen a community for these types of games that may be relevant:
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