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132
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • you can do some things to be able to enable it again once you're set up.

  • I feel like every use case they showcase is useless if you remember the commands. And if you don't know a command, the classic googling until you find something that works usually does the trick.

  • I used fzf like twice or so and I can't live without fuzzy finding anymore.

  • I think we've all been at a point like this

  • I use vim btw

  • Deleted

    me irl

    Jump
  • I read functional instead of fictional and thought John was dunking on functional programming.

  • There are some BSDers that unironically consider Linux too mainstream.

  • people will read stable and instantly comment debian

    Jokes aside, given that you said in a comment that it's for non-tech-savvy people, I'd say Linux Mint, partially just because it will look familiar if they've seen any Windows PC.

  • I think pacman hooks could help you

  • hörgenmal

  • The "[thing] [synonym for 'is bad'] and here's why" title has been a thing on YouTube for years now.

  • He confirmed in the premiere chat that the broken wallpaper is a direct hbomberguy reference.

  • I read a bit ago here that other Mastodon instances will think it's a new instance with new users (who coincidentally have the same content as the old users)

  • I don't understand the people who say it's long, like no it isn't, 1:15:24 is a completely reasonable (if not even a bit short) time for the topic.

  • The weirder part is the issues they don't do that in.

  • I thought this was gonna be a "this comment can only be viewed by lemmy gold subscribers" thing

  • I've been using Gentoo for a bit less than a month now. Installing the binary version of a package can easily be done by providing one or two flags to emerge. The binary packages are compiled pretty generic, to work with most systems, so you lose out on most of the compilation level control.