

Nah, rollbacks are a feature to save you when it has broken. A good one indeed, but it’s more akin to a fire extinguisher. It doesn’t prevent the problem, but it does prevent everything from being a pile of ashes.
Nah, rollbacks are a feature to save you when it has broken. A good one indeed, but it’s more akin to a fire extinguisher. It doesn’t prevent the problem, but it does prevent everything from being a pile of ashes.
Turn the page about 45 degrees clockwise, you’ll write more straight across the page and the pen will work better because you’re not pushing it. Experiment until you find the angle that works best for you.
Additional bonus: No more smudges on your hand/the page.
Well, OP only specified that they’d been using Linux for about a decade; no mention of their laptops not being from the early 90s. :)
Great operating system, that. Shame it lacks a text editor.
I think that’s called grayjay.
Published in World Economic Forum · 5 min read · Nov 12, 2016
It’s worse than that, the first safety inspection is after four years, not six.
Here’s one for less than 4 USD. I imagine 150 mm in length would be sufficient.
With a useful shortcut at isup.me
They know about it; doesn’t mean they actually did anything to counter it.
The issue is not ammonia (at least not when it comes to urine) but rather urea, which also reacts with hypochlorite to create chloramines.
Kubuntu on my desktop, I prefer KDE as a DE and I’m used to the Debian ecosystem.
Linux Mint on my relatively low powered laptop that I rarely use.
Debian stable on my media server.
Thank you for the corrections, I think I maybe skimmed the text back when it went through the EP, so I was mostly going from (poor) memory.
My understanding is that this would allow for lawsuits along the lines of “Your poorly written software caused [our business to lose this giant contract|thousands of consumers left with bricked devices|my washing machine to eat my dog]. Now pay up!”
Essentially, software vendors (vendor being the operative word here) would become liable for damage caused by their faulty products, just like manufacturers of air compressors or toys or fireworks.
Indeed, Poul-Henning Kamp of bikeshed and BSD fame got a nice little discussion thread started yesterday over on Mastodon: https://mastodon.social/@bsdphk@fosstodon.org/113317528662477344
Yeah, I’m assuming developers in the big software companies are donning lifejackets due to the amount of palm sweat from the C-suites.
I’ve found liberal amounts of contact cleaner to solve inadvertent double clicking.
It’s in Spanish while being labelled as English.