I’ve been loving it on desktop, personally
I’ve been loving it on desktop, personally
I used to use Inter Semibold as my main UI font but recently moved over to SF Pro Text Semibold. I’ve been consistently using the Nerd Fonts version of Fira Code for terminal/IDE
Target disk mode is fantastic, I’m thrilled to see this coming to Linux
Hey, they could have taken the Google option and let the phones die at 20% charge because there was too much voltage draw for the aging battery to handle
Yeah, it was Lion and even before then it was something like $35 to upgrade which was less than the cost to upgrade Windows at the time.
The highest margin for most is probably merch purchased at venues, including physical media
This is no longer the case since venues started taking a cut of merch sales
That sounds about right for the first retina MacBooks
I disagree with citing Framework for now since they’ve only existed for 3 years. They are certainly exciting and genuinely seem to be dedicated to long term support and repairability but in my opinion they need to exist longer than that before they can be cited as example of supporting a device for a very long time.
Its the New York Times not someones personal blog. If they are publishing sloppy work that is their fault.
I just want someone to finally copy column view from Finder. I know Ranger has it but it would be nice if Nautilus or Dolphin would implement it.
The eMMC one does support installing an NVMe, and from what I’ve seen the Deck can’t really support more than PCIe 3.0 speeds. If you find a good deal on a PCIe 4.0 or 5.0 drive it will still work but there’s no reason to spend extra on a newer drive.
For a long time Stitcher was taking public podcast feeds, adding their own advertising, and re-encoding the podcasts which reduced the audio quality and made it harder for podcasters to tell how many downloads they were getting. For iHeart it’s honestly mostly ideological for me. iHeart is what Clear Channel rebranded to and they control more of American terrestrial radio than any other company. Having listened to podcasts since 2005 I liked that they were a lot smaller scale, that they were more community oriented and diy. Yes there were networks like Maximum Fun and TWiT, but none of them were on the scale that iHeart is. There is some good stuff on their network, but like a lot of the corporations that only started getting into podcasts after Serial they have a much different view of what podcasts are and should be than I do.
Good riddance. Stitcher was a blight on podcasts, I can only hope that iHeartMedia is next.
I personally prefer Newsflash because the main dev of Fluent is weirdly adamant about not implementing either customizable shortcuts or the standard vim-style navigation that almost all desktop RSS readers have had since Google Reader included them