

And ngrok is en-grok, not en-jii-rok…
Programmer by day, burnt out by night.
And ngrok is en-grok, not en-jii-rok…
Ah that makes sense, thanks!
the laptops mostly use Intel x86 chips
I mean, I’d be happy to see them ship ARM laptops in the vein of Apple’d M chips or Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite chips ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
So their laptops were running Android?
Reading the article it was a closed source OS, with their own closed-source Linux-based kernel.
I once freed 28 GB using find ~/Downloads/ -mtime +30 -delete
Honestly, I could do and have done Unreal, Unity and (easily) Godot development on less!
But that’s the minimum to spend for a very comfortable experience, I’d say; RX7900 and GTX 4090 are only there for bragging, while an on-board GPU would not be comfortable running game graphics in my opinion but I’ve seen people do it and not complain :/
Off-topic but:
Linux Mint
GPU: AMD RX7600XT
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 5800x
RAM: 16GB DDR4
That’s surprisingly mid-range, I don’t think I ever see that; just budget specs or bragging-level specs. As someone with almost the same build (Ryzen 7 4700GE, RX7700XTX, 16 GB DDR4) I’m positively surprised!
I can speak for Nord’s client sending requests to Google for some reason, maybe not great for privacy thus not great for piracy either.
I can speak well of Mullvad, but advise against sending hundreds of bucks in one go as paper mail is not exactly well secured. There’s another VPN that happily accepts cash as payment and doesn’t need your info but I can’t find it atm…
Dumb answer: Just use a VPN, my guy.
This one does not spark joy.
That’s just the difference between compiled and interpreted.
Interpreted programs such as web apps can very much be programs, after all.
We need to rewrite it to nerd.rs for speed and memory safety!
Checking their profile, they do seem to be a furry, yeah!
Xubuntu is Ubuntu with the XFCE desktop, after all ;-)
Now if only there’s one for off-by-one errors!
Ah but… Nobody uses that! Because then you wouldn’t choose JSON
XML can validate itself and there’s the self-documenting WSDL; so while it has more overhead and an ugly syntax it can make for a more stable and earlier to understand API for your API’s consumers.
It’s fine in PHP, so that catches most server backends.
Ruby as well, it even raises a warning about the string where a bool should be!
Python handles it just fine, as well.
Rust doesn’t allow it, depending on the backend framework and server software this might give issues.
So depending on how this is handled a C# or Rust backend might cause the name not to be stored, but then I’d expect nothing to be stored… :/
IMO Kate is just VS Code or Sublime Text but worse. The LSP never works, I can’t have multi-caret editing, it’s harder to extend it’s functionality, etc. etc.
Just use open source VS Code (or better yet VS Codium), at that point.
:>