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Use. Firefox. Now!
Use. Firefox. Now!
Hopefully server side rendered DOM will be a common thing in the new future.
I would love sth like this with nextcloud integration.
This weren’t farmers but Neonazis from the “IdentitäreBewegung” acting as farmers.
They’re trying to destroy the political dialog by agitating some far right idiots to act as this stupid.
The annoying thing is, the law enforcement hardly works. not one of the people from that coup is currently in prison. So we can expect the executive in Germany does not have any interest in a democratic state anymore.
Readability counts, toxic comments … not sure
Mount your .cache dirs into memory via tmpfs
What’s your problem with the Fennec?
I mean, as long you only need the delta in milliseconds it’s easy. Just count the milliseconds from 1970 to the event. The problem starts when you want to have a human readable representation.
It’s calenders they suck, not time.
I guess that’s your DE you’ll hardly every feel any snappyness from your kernel.
Linux distributions are not the same. A Suse with KDE looks and feels 100% different than a gnome Ubuntu.
Normally its better practice to have the server configuration stored in a declarative way like ansible or similar and only store the userdata in the backup.
So you can fast and easy reinstall your server including all of its config files and then clone the usage data like dbs or files into the new machine. This is more reliable and also faster than just do a full dump of the system.
I also do not like the design and workflow gnome enforces the user to, but I would never discourage anybody from using it.
Just mount it into your RAM
So the apps are broken. Cache is meant to be deleted at any time
Even better: mount ~/.cache as ramfs. It will also speed up some apps significantly.
Sometimes in enterprise environments you’re not allowed to have a proper Linux and you’re forced even as dev to use that thing from ms.
Since hardly any code in the web runs on NT, the wsl is the only way getting your things done. It does what it does OK(ish) but except of that single usecase I would never use it.
Debian Testing and Arch with KDE on the PC/Workstation.
Debian Stable on the server.
Especially for beginners its a bad language. You have the understand artificial concepts about classes, objects, abstract states before you re able to learn the important stuff like if/else, looping etc pp.
I would always give beginners a language which is at least in their way as possible.
Paru!
Just change the icon to the chrome ones.