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tropshop

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tropshop
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
I have Apple Silicon but develop on docker x86. The game changer for me was macOS Ventura with rosetta support for linux vms.

I use UTM to run Debian 11 ARM. The update-binfmts command is absolutely magical, docker images will happily run both arm and x86 binaries.

Battery lasts all day and the machine stays ice-cold.

https://docs.getutm.app/advanced/rosetta/
tropshop
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
Remix is a server-side rendering framework focused on pre-SPA web fundamentals like progressive enhancement and minimizing downloading and evaluating JavaScript and CSS assets for lighter, faster pages.

Edit: It does in-fact load a JSON payload along with client-side routing as well if you click to view comments. But then if you use browser refresh, it renders as a traditional server-side request. So true to its name, Remix is a blend of both approaches, playing on the strengths of each.
tropshop
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Halo Combat Evolved is how I got into software development. It only had LAN multiplayer, but tunneling software on your PC enabled you to play over the internet. That blew my mind in high school and I got heavily involved in the community, writing mIRC scripts, chat bots, forum plugins, application skins, and so much more.

Man I spent endless hours playing and coding back then. But I never could get into the later Halos. The gameplay was so drastically different. The CE pistol was the ultimate weapon. It was always available and had the potential to bail you out of any scenario. But you can’t solely rely on it to win competitive games. Powerup timing is king. Everyone knew the exact second overshield/rockets would spawn, so there was a natural flow to the maps as teams pushed to gain these items. Halo 2 and beyond removed all of this.