“OK then do me a favor, shut it down, unplug the power for 5 second and plug it back in”
“OK then do me a favor, shut it down, unplug the power for 5 second and plug it back in”
I’m currently trying Fedora Kinoite and from the get go the hassle of getting a proper Firefox+codecs to watch online videos feels like a major step back.
Then you have the issue of installing software in flatpack (is: vscode, texmaker) that are either not fully working of need to have their access tweaked. Atomic distros appeal is to “just work” it doesn’t seem like it does.
+1… Started using Zola and built on top of it to learn scss, javascript, and HTML. All that extra building was not required for a running site but was still a great learning experience.
Some bloggers have experimented and used Mastodon as a medium to comments on their blog posts. Works quite well.
https://danielpecos.com/2022/12/25/mastodon-as-comment-system-for-your-static-blog/
Siemens makes NX. Catia is made by Dassaults. They compete for the same space in the market
It’s a software that is used extensively in aerospace and car industries. It’s also ludicrous how expensive the licenses are.
It’s hard to beat for completeness of functions but also for complexity.
Working with Catia is the other way around, no amount of documentation is complex enough that you really understand what something does or can do.
I don’t care how much you think your code is readable, plain text comments are readable by everyone no matter the proficiency in the programming language used. That alone can make a huge difference when you’re just trying to understand how someone handled a situation.
The main issue is programming in a specific language limit who can contribute to those who speaks that language. In that sense English makes sense as it is already a widely used language in a work context. It would probably limit those who are willing to use the software as it makes auditing harder.
It’s just too bad it doesn’t render properly on mobile because reading it backward made no sense.
From personal experience making the jump from Python to Julia was overall painless, it was probably made to be as well. I do agree that rust on the other end is something else. Even after clearing the whole rustlings course I was still brute forcing my way through code by relying on the compiler to tell me where borrowers were missing. Spoiler: everywhere!
Just tried both and I don’t know which one made me feel better
One felt like being run over by a train, the other felt I was a legless puppy in front of a kindergarten.