Try this…
"What date is it today? "
“Today is the 31st”
“31st of what?”
“The 31st of August”
“…?”
“Today is Saturday the 31st of August, 2024”
Etc.
See. It works even more so
Try this…
"What date is it today? "
“Today is the 31st”
“31st of what?”
“The 31st of August”
“…?”
“Today is Saturday the 31st of August, 2024”
Etc.
See. It works even more so
I may or may not do this occasionally with byobu and my own services. Byobu is easier to use.
You are most likely invoking a “hold my beer” moment.
We are deep in the technical weeds here. 95% of Linux usage really doesn’t require such humour unfortunately.
What else would you supplement a terrible diet with?
Nobody drinks Lipton in the UK
This is the answer! Next question is why doesn’t the flatpack install do this for you?
It’s a fine distribution. I have it on my desktop and at least one laptop. But yes, a weird way to decide to distro hop 🤣
Top tip, if tired, replace the rm -f
part of the command with something innocuous for a first run.
Actually, is better to do this mistake once so that the two important lessons are learned…
Backup (obviously, in your case it was backups, but the point still stands) and double check your command if it has potential for destruction 👍
csh FTW eh 🤣
You can have both python 2 and 3 on the system. It just depends upon which is the default as to how much you break it 👍
The symlink to /usr/bin/python
is the important bit for most software. For deb-based at least, update-alternative is your friend.
Feels like my old job.
What’s the digital clock in your terminal?
Try Lunarvim, it’s neovim with a bunch of great Plugins and configuration settings out of the box.
No they were not setting standards. They were in fact breaking them. Their own standards were not disclosed, forcing competitors to actually have to reverse engineer them in order to try to have a chance at compatibility. The whole reason for the lack of uniformity was Microsoft fucking with the standards!
Secondly, the competitors did not have a significant market share. Thirdly, it’s funny that you mention in the context of a developer, given that they all complain mightily, even to this day, about having to support the festering pile of IE versions still around. Still, this won’t stop you telling, so you go do your thing elsewhere please.
No. I was just looking for an example of when Microsoft created standards for IE that other browsers could adopt, given that they were tied into IIS and undocumented in order to give them an uncompetitive advantage. Let’s also think about how they deliberately downgraded performance, or broke functionality on non Microsoft browsers, again for anti competitive behaviour.
They were called browser wars for a reason, and Microsoft is very well documented indeed regarding their fuckerry. But you go ahead trolling.
In Europe, we do say 31st August. Want gaslighting, just giving examples.