Also I’m quite sure /dev/hdx is a thing
Also I’m quite sure /dev/hdx is a thing
Like seriously, this must be fake. Add a zero and I’d still find it suspiciously cheap.
Comments are the worst as they are ignored by refactoring. That’s the reason if (false) is actually really good for temporarily disabled code.
Yeah, depending on your definition of reinstall you either reinstall NixOS never or on every boot. There’s no in-between.
Lol, top. Try that to figure out the load on a 256 core DGX slurm setup with that shit. Top is barely usable on consumer hardware…
Yes, wefwef got the memo and changed its name to Voyager. Maybe it’s an age issue - most pirates are young.
There really isn’t a single good name in this entire area of software. Just a massive cringefest.
dream2nix
In contrast to btrfs it doesn’t break your data. Everyone learns the hard way not to use btrfs…
I use it for workstations, laptops and servers alike. I also configure them all on my home pc and remote push the config. Been a while since I manually SSH’d onto one of my machines…
You should take a look at the Gentoo logo. That’s an international hate crime of a logo.
Funny. Whole reason I use nixos is because I cba to tinker with my systems anymore. Tell me another OS with which I can manage 20+ systems with even less effort and I’d consider switching.
My configs remember stuff for me.
" Traditional tiling window managers solve the hidden window problem preventing windows from overlapping. While this works well in some cases, it falls short as a general replacement for stacked, floating windows. "
In 10 years of working with tiling WMs productively on a daily basis this has been an issue exactly 0 times. Even in a world that is tailored to non-tiling WMs they just perform better. Period.
Oh, you are the guy from the neighboring beach. We should consider synchronizing our sacrifice.
When Windows 3.1 came out I had a hard time understanding any of it and never left my cozy DOS CLI with its Norton Commander.
Granted I was still a child, but one might think that mouse-first and colorfulness would have driven my curiosity. Instead I switched when Windows 95 arrived.
I’m curious: what’s missing for you?
I needed a few smaller features (like rebasing onto any commit, not just HEAD) and found the code quite easy to adapt to my needs (had to take half a day to learn Go first though).
A proper gerrit integration would be awesome though.
What’s lacking for you and where did you end up tool-wise?
I raise that by a “I wouldn’t know how to survive half a day without lazygit”. From my experience only maggit is in the same level - I just don’t use emacs.
About weekly in my case.