C:\repos
or ~/repos
C:\repos
or ~/repos
Look, english spelling is already a mess for me to parse (non-native speaker). If y’all start using this other alphabet, I’m just not gonna bother reading.
“Oh no! Anyway” kind of comment, but I must protest somehow.
Who tf is this Jessica Simpson?
She just took the name Jessica and fumbled at the beginning.
Never liked egg whites, tastes like cold snot to me, hence, this picture upsets me.
I do enjoy the yolks tho.
As a person who hates the taste of egg whites, this deeply upsets me.
No seasoning, no stirring, no nothing… Just imagining the cold, snotlike taste of thar egg white is making me gag.
Yeah, I noticed that on GNOME as well
TL; DR
My experience between Windows and Linux is not much different with how often I have issues. But given the choice I much more prefer my Linux experience.
I hate Windows just as much as the next guy, but this comment section smells a little of confirmation bias.
From my experiece (web dev in a mainly MS branded stack) Windows mostly just works. Yes there are horrendous design, UX choices forced upon me, but I can usually force the OS to do what I need and how I need it.
Now comparing it to my home Pop setup it also mostly just works. There are occasional freezes that require a restart and such, but I wouldn’t say it’s much more different from Windows.
Now what does differ a lot is that I don’t need to fight the OS to do shit. It’s way better productivitywise, when I know what I’m doing. Which is deffinetly not the case everytime.
There was an issue, don’t know how relevant now, with WSL 2 that caused awfully slow host filesystem operations. Not sure if it got fixed by now
Good, they even compiled a list of sources.
I usually use uBO elements zapper or just inspect element and edit HTML myself
Depends, some pages don’t actually load the full content. Removing the paywall pop-up doesn’t really work then.
As a developer I like to mess with everything. Currently we are doing an infrastructure migration and I had to do a lot of non-development stuff to make it happen.
Honesly I find it really usefull (but not necessary) to have some understanding of the underying processes of the code I’m working with.
I have a bunch of them, so what
From my experience, killing a process from task manager does free up any file locks held by the process. However, I wouldn’t consider it being graceful, any in-app cleanup is lost this way.
Bold of you to assume we had hotel money when I was 12
I wouldn’t consider it superior, just different, in case of a keyboard shortcut.
What’s a carpool lane? Do we have them in Europe?
“I’m too old for this shit”