I put newlines in my filenames to break both CLI tools and Windows filesystems
I put newlines in my filenames to break both CLI tools and Windows filesystems
Taking courses which involve subjects that you will likely never encounter in the workforce is a thing in every discipline. Most engineers don’t need to manually solve differential equations in their day jobs, they just need to know that they exist and will often require numerical solutions.
Getting your hands dirty with the content provides a better understanding when dealing with higher level concepts.
zsh-syntax-highlighting
There’s also a fork called fast-syntax-highlighting, I use it.
CSS is turing conplete.
What about adding the flags last?
rm deletethisrepo -rf
You could still NAT between v6’s though.
I care mostly about shell scripting, so I’m focusing on those bits. Via the HackerNews thread, mostly from a-french-anon:
Strange, I don’t see this behavior on my device. Not sure what information would be relevant to debugging this though.
A few from Itch, Parallel Launcher from Flatpak for SM64 hacks
It’s probably the biggest deal for games running in xwayland
That’s a latrine. They’re talking about a fancy light fixture.
Also, monetization
How is it compared to wofi?
More people should be like you.
Exact same. Sway’s 1.0 release was March of 2019, and it did everything I needed.
Even playing games on my desktop, Xwayland worked fine for me.
Nope. If you open a nonexistent path and you have permissions to write to that directory, then that file is created.
8GB memory + two Firefox profiles makes things difficult on my laptop.
Others have mentioned disk usage and desktop integration. There is some truth to them, but shared runtimes keeps disk uasge down (although worse than native apps). Desktop launchers now search /var/lib/flatpak/exports/share/applications
by default, but I’m still having issues with themes in one or two niche apps.
Trust is the big one. The benefit of your distro’s packages is that they are maintained by a limited number of maintainers. Flatpaks have a much, much larger number of maintainers, which is where sandboxing comes in. Flathub now marks apps with lax permissions as “potentially unsafe”, which is a huge step in communicating this to the average user.
Most desktop apps can get away with having next to no access, as long as they support the appropriate XDG desktop portals.
Ultimately, your mileage will vary, as there are many classes of application which are ill-suited to being sandboxed. Program launchers, programming languages, IDEs, file managers are a few.
Move the keyboard to the floor
I know that “Vanity Addresses” are a common thing for onion sites, and there are tools which generate tons of keys looking for prefixes. I haven’t seen such a tool for ssh host keys though.