

At the moment youtube isn’t working on kodi :(
At least for me
At the moment youtube isn’t working on kodi :(
At least for me
Me too and me too :)
Which languages would that be? I imagine it is used in most cases.
The demo unfortunately doesn’t seem to be available anymore
Fuck that. More masculine energy workplace my ass.
Edit: Sorry I don’t have anything better to add.
Just started that recently, very good so far.
Well there’s your headline!
Helix is absolutely wonderful.
Used to use Vim/Neovim, but the hassle of setting it up and maintaining huge configuration files was a pain (for me).
Also I never really got it working the way I wanted and never had LSP working for all the languages I needed.
Helix on the other hand. My config file is under 20 lines, LSP works super for all my needs. Well thought out keybindings (mostly) and overall a joy to use.
Nice features and fast.
Still a bunch of things missing, it is a rather young piece of software, but I have been using it as my only editor for the last 1 1/2 years.
Thanks for the writeup! I am happy to have been corrected and will go do some further reading.
Steam Deck uses gamescope, Valve’s own Wayland compositor in game mode.
It uses X11 in desktop mode, but I am sure they will change to Wayland there as well, since plasma 6 uses Wayland by default.
Yes, and another projektrojekt MaxDB, is named after his son Max.
Happy to hear :) It is pretty great!
Shout out to Hedgewars - a GPL Worms kinda game. Played it a lot, especially during covid.
Definitely Publii, the most polished I’ve tried lately and perfect for simple static websites. Nice app, offline, free/open source.
So nerdy, so good
That’s the spirit!
I took a look at the “coder” and said no thanks.
I think some more information would be nice.
Is the device supposed to send or receive?
Data or simple messaging?
What kind of traffic do you expect? Streaming video or a few status messages a day.
Pretty fun reading. Always good to see some theory and real world mixed.
The article talks about code interviews focusing on big O and how it can be misleading.
Nice that both Go and Python, a compiled and an interpreted language, are used in the examples, to higlight what is actually going on and how theory can/does differ from praxis.