Yeah, my first question when I saw the title was “how do you even gather this data?”. It’s actually pretty cool as steam probably has rather reliable data in its own niche.
Yeah, my first question when I saw the title was “how do you even gather this data?”. It’s actually pretty cool as steam probably has rather reliable data in its own niche.
Maybe with zRAM and a bit of swap it could run quite ok 🤷
But the future is inevitable, isn’t it better to be less pessimistic and attempt to be prepared for it instead of just waiting?
Although shaming newcomers for their distro choice is not a welcoming move 💢
😢
I don’t believe it either, I think they said it wouldn’t arrive before 2025 :/
But I want it soooo much, the OLED version looks awesome but it’s no an upgrade big enough to justify getting rid of my original version
Could it mean Steam Deck 2 already? 🤞
Although it depends of the backup format :
Didn’t GNOME support Wayland way earlier than KDE ?
That’s what saved me too but I’m still stuck with unpredictable crashes, 150GB of HDD / 8GB of RAM lost in the void and bullshit ads for copilot in the lock screen …
Thanks for the background, as a very recent nix adopter this drama seems like a lot 😥
But on Linux aren’t most drivers part of the kernel?
As some others mentioned it depends on context. My project managers do a lot of shit I don’t want to do : handling budgets, discussing project scope with clients, handling authorization request to external APIs (I’m in a big company) and also most PO stuff (writing tickets and handling sprint ceremonies).
Sometime they are a bit annoying because they freak out about deadlines and ask question every 10min while you try to focus and actually solve the bug, but at least they are self aware that it is because they feel helpless in this kind of situation 😛
Also, more about the proxy thing, sometime I have to explain technical things that simplifies and then they will probably explain it again to clients with a second layer of simplification. But I usually never hear about this again, which probably means that they manage to reassure client and maybe add a bit of bullshit on parts that don’t really mater, which spares me a lot of time overall.
I see a lot of people saying that your managers are bad managers, but I think your organization also put them in a badly defined role.
Yeah, people who built those modern technologies are mostly over 50, I suppose.
On a lighter note, the protocol might be proprietary but the bridge still seems to be fully open source : https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge
I don’t think think Proton shows bad will on this one. The only alternative I can think of (as a non expert) would be IMAP + GPG encrypted emails but very few desktop clients support GPG, which would make them less accessible 🤷♂️ Having their own protocol also probably makes it much much easier for them to iterate on it, opening up usually makes think much robust but also slower.
Tbh I am not surprised there are people who don’t know what cut is. When I was in school a lot of people around me though it was just the graphical button to delete things. I think UI tried to solve the problem since them : cutting won’t delete a file but will just shade it, which makes it more obvious that you should do another action.
Same issue but with sleep time 😱
13 years to be exact! https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=D1sXuHnf_lo
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I think that’s one thing about open source project : a lot of people work for free so they invest time on what they want and like. I don’t know if it’s what happens here, but I think in general it is not fair to ask for an optimal time management in open source communities.
I’d say it depends if you are a technical user or not.