You banned my account and not the one I replied to? Baffling.
I'll probably make a new account eventually because I enjoy communicating with the intelligent people on this site. Your behaviour is very inconvenient, though.
> Linux on the over hand it's a continuous installation of drivers and fixing functionality that works out of the box on my windows
Actually things are more likely to work "out of the box" on Linux if you're a bit careful with what hardware you buy. Windows is the one that needs drivers for just about everything. Linux has thousands built in. I haven't had to do anything after installing Ubuntu for years.
Well it doesn't say that. I just said it sounds like a reinvention of Lisp because that's what it sounded like to me from what it says on the homepage.
If you're not already a lisper I would recommend learning Common Lisp from one of the many excellent books. Learning the differences for Emacs Lisp afterwards is a breeze, and you get a much a more general purpose view of Lisp.
Tbh you just sound like someone who knows what the right thing to do is but is too damn weak to do it for yourself. Your posts are screaming out "if it's the right thing, why won't someone make it easy for me to stop?"
Sadly you are just like most people throughout human history. We're ashamed of some of the things people have done in the past, and in the future people will be ashamed of this.
Wilful ignorance and indulging in the illusion presented by supermarkets and their suppliers. Such people dislike vegetarians and vegans because they are worried that they might remind them about the illusion.
Phones started to get too small in the 2000s. I can't remember which phones in particular but some definitely had buttons too small for most people's hands.
That's the risk you run when you choose convenience over sustainability. If you spent some time and used syncthing you'd get something that won't just disappear some day.
Tab completion makes it significantly better. It's a bit like syntax highlighting. If it doesn't tab complete properly then something is probably wrong.
Training yourself to be tolerant of mistakes on the command line seems like a very bad idea. Carpenters have a rule: measure twice, cut once. Train yourself to do the same.
I'll probably make a new account eventually because I enjoy communicating with the intelligent people on this site. Your behaviour is very inconvenient, though.