An sich eine coole Sache. Ist aber schon bisschen blöd, dass man mit dem Flexpreis Ticket nicht mehr so frei unterwegs sein kann.
Looks amazing, especially adaptive Firefox and GTK.
Another OCaml connoisseur (at least semi-forced, as it looks like a university exercise).
Looks interesting, but I would've really liked some gameplay. From what's being shown here and on gematsu it somehow looks like a mixture between Observer and Bioshock (only universe, not really gameplay).
Not sure where that commenter is from, but it's the case for Germany. Pretty useful to compare
Is there a place where I can see a list of features set to release with 10.9?
How good are they compared to Haribo? The candy in the picture looks pretty normal to me.
Read on to learn more about our next major update and the next few months in Guild Wars 2.
The new trailer, roadmap and so much more are here! What are your thoughts about it? The thing that I'm probably most excited about are the changes in post processing. Turning bloom off without touching the other post processing settings is amazing.
Pretty much, yes. Although most of the guides install nix via curl. You can find the recommended installation procedure on the official nix website.
What I'm right now also realizing is that i switched things up. nix-shell -p curl
creates a shell with the curl command temporarily available. If you exit this shell it's gone. I use this all the time if if i don't want to pollute my system with programs I only use once. If you want to permanently install something you have to use nix-env -iA nixpkgs.curl
. But don't take my words for granted, since I have never tested this on a non-nixos machine.
Note: You can also see how to install something by clicking on the package title in the nixpkgs repo.
Nixpkgs can be used without knowing anything about nix. You can install almost anything by just running e.g.:
nix-shell -p cowsay
The requirement for that is the nix package manager but that should be easy to install. But yeah getting into Nixos with flakes and all that stuff can be hard.
That's probably the best Unixporn I've seen on Lemmy
I really love the term "toilet paper deployment"
Lidarr + Navidrome works flawlessly for me. Navidrome also fetches data from LastFM, such as tending songs and artist info
Right now Debian, but I'll migrate to NixOS pretty soon since it's already running on all of my machines except this server.
If you right click anywhere you can get into a separate context menu from which you can reload/refresh. At least that's how it works for me
I followed this guide from VimJoyer and it works like a charm. Have been using this approach for quite a while now. It just uses raw nix with homemanager
Well documented code is really helpful though, so if you'd use this code professionally I would've even left these comments in. It's always a pain in the ass trying to "reverse engineer" old code.
But since your'e doing a career change I think you're on a really good path
The code looks nice. Just as a recommendation: It's always better to let the code document itself and not with comments. So rather than "# Check if the element is found" you could create a function called something like "check_for_element".
Mine would probably still be Drydock Scratch aka Retrospective Runaround. I just love these huge caverns. It makes me feel like I'm an explorer uncovering a lost civilization.