still using things like Google Chrome or Chromebooks in 2023 is actually reckless behaviour. stuff like manifest v3 and the web integrity api just prove that google will use their monopoly to take over the open internet
What do you mean obvious border changes? It's all the same except the UK is missing. That's the joke
Wow, that is a cherry-picked example if I've ever seen one. The Rothschilds are mentioned exactly once on this page and it's in this sentence:
"He [David Icke] contends that most of the world's ancient and modern leaders are related to these reptilians, including the Merovingian dynasty, the Rothschilds, the Bush family and the British Royal family."
Including the Rothschilds, as well as several other non-Jewish families. The Rothschilds are part of the conspiracy not because they're Jewish, but because they're influential.
OneNote on my foldable laptop. I use it to take notes in uni simply because it's the best option out of all the ones I've tried. I like OneNote's stabilization and infinite canvas. What annoys me tho is that you cannot set the canvas to paged, so if you're planning on exporting to pdf you have no idea where the page boundaries are.
With the last Windows 11 update they fucked it up tho and now the app is garbage anyways
1899
It's a mystery show made by the same people that made Dark and I was so down for it. Then Netflix cancelled it after season 1
The appeal of vim is actually the opposite of just fast typitg speed. Vim's default mode is one where you can't type, you can only edit. The reasoning is that when coding as you said, you tend to think more and edit existing code, rather than writing completely new code. I find that vim has a lot more features for navigating and editing code than any other editor
I'll give it a shot :) If I manage to make something useful I'll share it
I wouldn't exchange my neovim config for anything. After getting used to how vim works and installing all the plugins I need, I feel like this is my favourite editor. It looks nice and I enjoy using keyboard shortcuts over using a mouse.
That said, the day I lose my neovim config is the day I die. If it disappears I'm doomed
You were not supposed to see that. They didn't want you to
KDE Plasma is bloat
Ah, so someone needs to be actually subscribed to a community for their content to show up in All?
Alright I guess I'll have to write a simple Bot that can do that for me then
does it cancel out?
source: i made it the fuck up
This is actually revolting, thanks
perhaps it's because you're insulting the very people you're trying to convert to your cause. work on your rhetoric and watch your success rate skyrocket
I'll give that a shot! OneNote is literally unusable since the last Windows update because the on-screen keyboard keeps popping up everytime I touch the screen. then it goes away immediately and leaves a bugged white rectangle on the canvas
In my neovim setup I have basically the same functionality as vscode. with the added benefit of not having to reach for my mouse to navigate the cursor to a certain location. Vim has a steep learning curve, but all the hotkeys let you navigate way more quickly than you could with a mouse (or with arrow keys)
Edit: By "same functionality as vscode" I mean file tree, quickly finding files by searching, fuzzy finding terms in the project, syntax highlighting, linting, intelli sense, and all the qol features the modern developer wants like auto-closing brackets etc. Really the main reason I use vim is just the hotkeys. I've gotten used to them and wouldn't wanna go back to using my mouse that much. And ofc vim is a lot more lightweight than vscode
it can compute how often I needed to compute the value of calling a function an infinite number of times.
println!("0");
Now it's cap like this*
The first one ever was Lufthansa, the first one I flew with by myself was Korean Air
Not just for devices but also my hard drives, I use the names of stars. For example Rigel or Betelgeuse
Browse link aggregator website. Complain about links being aggregated