

Use the link function and add an exclamation mark in front of it to embed the image, like this: 
Use the link function and add an exclamation mark in front of it to embed the image, like this: 
Right? Look at the craft!
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I felt SO OLD in the cinema with my kid…
She’s a terrible person, but saying she’s a one-hit wonder is unfair. Here’s a list of famous and acclaimed authors who only wrote one novel. And she wrote several, even if all in the same series. Criticize for for her true faults: being a hateful hag that makes the world a worse place and isn’t worth the O2 she consumes.
https://www.in2013dollars.com/us/inflation/2008?amount=4.75 About $7 today, for those curious.
The Roman Empire lasted for 1000 years. Ancient Egypt lasted 3100 years. Sumer lasted 4000 years. 250 years is a piss in the ocean near those.
That’s what I was looking for! Thank you.
No, you don’t need a hovercraft to go grocery shopping.
A browser doesn’t need to be multiplatform, or work on gopher, or build a JS VM from the ground up, or build a media renderer from the ground up, or build a text rendering engine from the ground up.
Building browsers is hard enough, you don’t need to make it artificially harder by tacking on bullshit requirements.
Talking about Ansible in a “choose your first Linux distro article”? That and dismissing Mint for first timers make me not recommend this for noobs.
You should study about the trustbusting era of early 1900s. Then in the late 70s a new law reinforced antitrust legislation.
The issue is that the pendulum swings fast away from trustbusting and slowly back to it. Trustbusting creates economic development and prosperity, reducing public outcry for it, and capitalists yank the levers of government again towards monopoly building.
You mention the nineties, by even then Netscape successfully challenged Microsoft. But it was too little too late. The pendulum was already swinging back to monopoly, and it’s reaching it’s maximum in our days.
Like MS Codespaces or Gitpod, I assume.
Snap is like Flatpak. So it will store and maintain as many versions of dependencies as your applications need. So it gives you that benefit by automating the work for you. The multiple versions still exist if your apps depend in different versions.
TBH that’s the first video of his that I’ve ever watched. It’s not too bad, but there’s not much in the way of substance. Not for me. When I want to drain my brain after a hard work day, I’d rather watch some sci-fi.
He’s the most viewed YouTuber. It’s apparently impossible for a decent person to achieve this level of success in the hate machine that is the YouTube algorithm.
Aptitude is great (my favorite way of managing packages), but it’s a TUI program. You can use it as CLI, at which point it mimics apt-get.
So I would say it never attempted to unify apt commands, by rather it successfully provided a user friendly way to do most (all?) of what you could do with apt CLI tools.
SLAM! That’ll teach them!
How is that different from sending a PR?
Shut up and take my money already
Thank you so much!