That is, unless you define correct in mathematical terms. Which no one has done yet.
That is, unless you define correct in mathematical terms. Which no one has done yet.
as if they can even move to China, its market is already dominated by domestic replacements for everything
News at 11.
A well-designed button can be incredibly satisfying. Just ask anyone who owns a mechanical keyboard.
War is waged between governments and organizations. The death of civilians is an unavoidable side effect.
I think both Israel and Hamas need to calm tf down so that they can actually negotiate peace terms; but that ain’t happening so long as people send either side weapons.
What was the Fourth Reich?
Goodhart’s law:
When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.
dammit
A Linux user with a relationship?? Impossible! (/s)
🤨 vine boom
…and even then, good luck! Because I will have glued it to my cold, dead hands.
— Soldier, Team Fortress 2
Usually they work well enough, especially things that just involve repacking binaries (e.g. printer drivers)
And this, this is why I love the AUR
we do call them fuel cells
I heard lots of scammers use AnyDesk now
hallucination refers to a specific bug (AI confidently BSing) rather than all bugs as a whole
I use WezTerm. Highly configurable and supports every image display protocol under the sun.
From a developer’s standpoint, one of the bigger pain points of Wayland is window embedding.
If you want to embed from an external process, the only way to do this is to have your application expose its own Wayland compositor and then have the embedded process use that Wayland compositor. No one has made a library for this as of yet.
If you want to embed from the same process, it shouldn’t be too difficult; you just need a wl_subsurface
. However, this doesn’t work too well with most GUI toolkits.
Wayland is just radically different from every other windowing API, and I’m hoping that the GUI toolkits can adapt.
handling word documents
This is the biggest pitfall of Linux: Microsoft doesn’t make Office for Linux and the compatibility layers we do have don’t work well enough.
There are alternatives like LibreOffice, however, don’t expect them to be perfectly compatible with Office.
Everything else you listed is perfectly fine: Most browsers ship Linux versions, and those can be used for PDF viewing.
I’d recommend familiarizing yourself with the Linux command line, as most advanced system configuration has to be done through the CLI.
In addition, remember to do your research before asking for help. Good resources include the system manual pages, Arch Wiki, and of course, Google.
As for choice of distro, I’ll recommend Fedora, as it’s reasonably up to date with software and has a nice GUI for dealing with updates.
soon we will reach the magic number companies need to finally consider supporting Linux for once