I don't know, many people seem to love it. For what I've seen and the crazy amount of repos we have with ansible scripts and yaml and crazy string problems I'd say I completely hate it with passion. But I'm not really into the devops side of things, so maybe you need to get much more deeper into it to "appreciate" the insanity of yaml files and multiple repos.
There's not really much choice than trying to use qemu command line directly on windows. I didn't find any single useful GUI that was usable or newer than 3 or 4 years ago. It's a pretty sad state of affairs. I spend hours until I discovered that I needed to add some magic flag called machine for acceleration even work.
I don't understand the it is hard part. You register with a phone number after installing and that's it. Isn't that the same use case as whatsapp?
Sorry I never used Whatsapp, so it's really really hard to understand what are those features that people keep arguing about that are missing or so much easy of use on that application. I use Signal and Keybase regularly and I don't find them lacking.
So any write up anywhere talking about those misterious and amazing features and user friendly UI that only Whatsapp has?
I have friends that I know use keybase for work with a specific corporate account. I want to talk to them using their private account which I can't because the app only supports a single logged in user. So, is it easy or possible to have multiple accounts logged in and used at the same time? This includes that support for android also.
Maybe the chat application should be extracted into a separate more native application maybe since another "problem" I see my friends talking about is that it is too slow.
Also I'd suggest you may be interested in reading the article properly because he clearly explains and has a reason for the color-coding and for it to be visual.
Informative. Never had any idea that these MIDI things allowed people to use different music to reproduce it. I mean I always thought that MIDI was something about connecting real instruments to computers or something, never really saw a use for it. Reading from the comments it seems people used to share and play these on a previous era. Interesting. The video of the game sounds interesting I guess.
I think for many people this here doesn't mean anything. I'm having a really hard time understanding what is going on in the comments and on the post itself and I've just settled with "it's something about ascii art on terminals" and that's it. Probably has uses. But don't dismiss the confusion on lots of people since this appears to be target at older folks.
Haven't installed a rom on my sony xperia yet because it explicitly said in a few places that doing that voids the warranty. I still have around 1 year and half of waiting until mandatory warranty ends so I can feel ol with doing it.
I wrote a very reasonable text explaining my position (when I did the online vote) in wanting to abolish the DST bullshit and then when deciding which time to choose I'd prefer winter time for this exact same reason. I'm not oblivious to how painful sad, mad and traumatizing it was waking up to go to school in pitch black. As if I care about a few more artificial day hours at the end of the day. Just let it all be consistent and let my body adapt correctly to the changes that occur naturally over the year in how the sun changes. Noticing the sun adding or removing time daily or weekly is a relaxing thing. Much more than suddenly my perception being changed abruptly and not feeling where and when the sun is at all for weeks after DST change.
It's a worthy effort. It really tires you after a while with languages that constantly break the language, the libraries, the ecosystem and the tooling in the ao called "minor versions". Ain't nobody got time to deal with that stuff. Then they are surprised that people still run "ancient" versions of compilers or libraries. Yes scala it's about you.
Open source is not open for all. Is open only to the developers. The most and the important distinction.
Anyway we should avoid creating this confusion with this new crazy license, commons clause is malicioua in ita attempt to use a well understood term in a way that twista its meaning.
Ohh interesting. Didn't get that far yet. But good to know. Is there somekind of place listing these gotchas with the syntax? Seems something good to be aware.
As a contrasting opinion I started reading the Ocaml book about something real world and I felt the syntax finally something fresh, beatiful and clean. But I also suffer from having to use scala everyday at work.
To save money, battery and potentially protect weird apps trying to abuse the use of internet on background. Have heard and seen so many justifications for it. Barely know people that have internet 100% of time on. Somewhere in Europe ;)
The problem with HN is that it has too many content not related to tech, like lots of politics and also is too american focused. Anybody not from america gets a feeling of being a little weirded out by some of the things and morals discussed around here. At least for me that's a problem. If that dev.to gets nice content and doesn't get all these america specific morally political stuff going around maybe I'll use it.
Got the same frustration just the other day this was here. Thehack was opening someother page and then was able to get to that link. Still don't understand much what the site is about. It feels like an interface to a specific subreddit.