Plus you have plenty of time to tumble once or twice while your large codebase compiles.
Just chilling
Plus you have plenty of time to tumble once or twice while your large codebase compiles.
Yeah, this is pretty textbook selection bias.
3DMark or some other benchmark utility might help next time.
Can we joke about log4shell? Maybe heartbleed?
Can this power be learned?
It’s the Dodgerolet Corviper.
This is floating point. We also need to know what happens when you escape with -0.
I do all my Linux kernel development, and especially compilation, on my steam deck.
I’m currently playing Lego City Undercover on my steam deck, which is only as crashy as the switch version, and it’s great because my 10 year old is also playing it on the switch, as is my 4 year old. Obviously we all play it differently but it’s been a fun couple of weeks all playing the same game.
Fair point. There’s a fine line between programming and creating data that a program operates on. I tend to think writing text to produce nontext output is more programming than not.
But also, you’re making a computer do what you want, and something that it wasn’t programmed by the factory to display, when you write HTML. You’re programming.
The difference between a SPA and any other site these days is simply where the application runs and what languages you can build it with, though less the latter with options like wasm.
That’s the final invisible panel. Code that definitely won’t compile, does compile, and tests all pass.
If you’re up for pgp and git, gnu password store is a killer app. There are a few guis, including Android and iOS, and if you use gopass there’s a nice plugin for browsers as well. And it’s ultimately just two tools that are both solid and generally well known.
I think it means you probably use software they contribute to even if you don’t pay them.
My 3090 is a light flickering machine. Kind of annoying tbh.
I mean, that’s exactly the same set of problems faced by closed source software. I guess one potential difference is that you can hire new devs to take over if it’s successful enough. But both crappy documentation and team burnout have killed lots and lots of internal projects at places I’ve worked.
I’m assuming OP wants to run on Linux and I’m not familiar enough with .NET Core to know how much or how easily you can run it on Linux. I know some things definitely run, I just don’t know how much.
It’s promotion-driven development at its finest.