Just because I have the energy to work 12 hours a day on a project doesn’t mean I should.
Actually I feel I should… My productivity at works comes and goes in phases, I have to make up for it in productive weeks if I don’t want to get fired.
Brave Search is awful for non-English results. Startpage is decent but only because it’s basically Google results.
It’s included with the 8 Pro.
They had that YouTube Premium Lite tier in a few regions, which was basically that. But Google just killed it.
I was wondering if this happend again so soon, since I already updated last week.
Reddit and Lemmy? In one app?
It’s a great tool but note that by default it upgrades EVERYTHING, up to and including production cloud environments if you are connected to any.
The vitriol the “Clean Code” cult has against comments is unbelievable…
I guess it’s preference. For some reason GNOME looks/feels better than KDE for me. I can’t even explain why.
Windows has billions of users, I guarantee you more than a few care about FOSS.
Also FOSS repos for Windows do exist, as explained in other comments here.
I still use it on nearly every new Windows install (including when helping others setup). Although Ninite itself is not FOSS, it has many of the best open source Windows software in its curated list.
There are a ton of great FOSS for Windows. Even before I moved to Linux as my primary OS, I used many of these because they were often just better than the proprietary alternatives.
I still have my old games case. I sometimes browse through it just for the nostalgia. Even just looking at the discs brings memories.
I think it’s the difference between the call ending suddenly (hang up) and the call not responding for several seconds before dropping (lost connection).
Will it be in 8K?
The Kestrel Cruiser from FTL. Even though it’s not even the coolest ship in the game, The Kestrel is still the most nostalgic for me.
It brings me back to when I first played FTL a decade ago. I was a kid back then and loved the game so much, I even built and painted a cardboard Kestrel model.
Why would they work well? Their business model doesn’t incentivize dating apps to work well. They sell subscriptions so they’d rather their users stay perpetually single and become increasingly desperate.