Noob here what is the difference?
also why would an extra but the same character y
make a difference? Is that common in the arch linux ecosystem?
Noob here what is the difference?
also why would an extra but the same character y
make a difference? Is that common in the arch linux ecosystem?
yes… if you have amnesia every Sunday…
The css theme is new.
give it a try, it is quite interesting
From my experience, everything feel much snappier than firefox.
opening new tab, switching tab feel snappier
User generated content would still be valuable
Ollama server running in termux
I thought the hook is made of metal… is it not?
Is that conductive? 😳
the first comparison is not technically correct, in the sense:
LibreWolf implements additional privacy features and settings on top of Firefox. Chromium is the base browser that everyone else built on top of. It does not implement additional privacy features.
perhaps a better comparison would be: LibreWolf is to Firefox what Ungoogled Chromium is to Chromium
Likely they want a lower time complexity.
for example a question can be trivially solved in O(n^2). but there is no know < O(n) solution, so they ask for O(n)
What do you want to use for frontend framework then?
python, ruby, java, C? Invent a new language?
you will see me screaming “X is for Y, it should have never been a whole framework for a frontend”
Due to security policy, we cannot run vm. Oh, btw, we do android development too. I guess they didn’t know android studio runs a vm. So that is ok
As part of our company’s security policy, our IT admin disallows firefox to be installed in dev machine.
our engineers cannot test their work in firefox.
LOL
They may not know if it is changed 😄
What is a CVS receipt layout? Why do you hate it?
npm ruin dev
npm ruin lint
npm ruin build
Oh wow, I have always thought the
y
stands for “yes to any questions” turns out it has a--noconfirm
Should have read the man page…
-y, --refresh Download a fresh copy of the master package databases (repo.db) from the server(s) defined in pacman.conf(5). This should typically be used each time you use --sysupgrade or -u. Passing two --refresh or -y flags will force a refresh of all package databases, even if they appear to be up-to-date.