dabe

joined 2 years ago
[–] dabe 24 points 6 months ago (3 children)

This is crazy! Unexpected, too, amidst all the ARM hype. Framework just keeps adding dubs

[–] dabe 34 points 6 months ago (4 children)

Can we just pretend that it is…

[–] dabe 1 points 1 year ago

I think lazy.nvim has a pretty decent UI box for when you have plugins already installed. Things like managing updates and uninstalling for a session. But yeah it would be such a mess for a separate program to mess with the actual nvim config, or it would require enough setup to make it not even worth it in the first place. 99% of plugins can be “installed” by just pasting their remote Git repo urls into your package manager setup so, it’s not bad really. Part of the trade off for more control and efficiency I guess!

[–] dabe 1 points 1 year ago

Might be cause it’s just so different from the rest of the gameplay, and kinda ignores the progression of your skills a bit. I’m sure KH2’s Atlantica did not help its case, either…

[–] dabe 1 points 1 year ago

Damn. Had no idea, and I 100%’d this game

[–] dabe 9 points 1 year ago

I mean, they didn’t exactly provide support for the original argument, so I don’t expect the dissent to provide support either… both are just funny opinions

[–] dabe 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think the idea is they’re equally polarizing lol

[–] dabe 2 points 1 year ago

Yup, at the end of the day, do whatever works. I’ve never had to mess with hybrid graphics but I’d imagine some distros handle it better, as you found. PopOS is great and their next update should he real sweet (they’re developing their own Desktop Environment in-house).

[–] dabe 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yeah this pretty much sums up where I landed after like 8 months of Linux desktop usage. The only reasons I ever boot back to windows is Valorant (which also requires me to turn Secureboot back on… I should just stop playing that game) and whenever I need to compile programs for Windows. But I’m gonna fix that second problem by turning an old laptop into a Windows build machine that I can access remotely.

Honestly, I’d say overall my experience with Linux desktop has actually surpassed Windows. KDE just runs snappier in every way and the app ecosystem you can access via flathub is so vast and polished. Everything feels like it has a lot of care going into it. Windows-only programs with no good Linux alternatives still exist, but for my use case I no longer have that problem.

[–] dabe 2 points 1 year ago

This looks crazy cool… one of those projects that I really wish I had a use for so I could try it lol

[–] dabe 3 points 1 year ago

Great read, and I love all the sources/links. Looking forward to see how this evolves!

[–] dabe 8 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Well, no, I don’t think so. 5/0 would make a ratio of 5:0, which is undefined.

10
submitted 2 years ago by dabe to c/devops
 

I’ve only been getting alerts for GitHub statuses for a month or so now, but it feels like they have an incident like once a week. And it’s to the point where I am actually noticing when they go down at work and in my programming hobbies. Have they always been this rocky, is this a more recent thing, or is it just me?

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/270731

Hi,

I recently used bdfr to download all the comments and contexts for one of my accounts. It’s great to have, but it would be cool to have a program that can parse it all and allow me to do things like search and view the comment structure with a simple GUI.

It’s all just JSON so I could write it myself, but I figured I’d ask first if anyone knew of an existing program for this. Thanks!

 

Hi,

I recently used bdfr to download all the comments and contexts for one of my accounts. It’s great to have, but it would be cool to have a program that can parse it all and allow me to do things like search and view the comment structure with a simple GUI.

It’s all just JSON so I could write it myself, but I figured I’d ask first if anyone knew of an existing program for this. Thanks!

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