

No, being able to change size is practical and convenient, there’s a reason people buy them despite the technology being so new
No, being able to change size is practical and convenient, there’s a reason people buy them despite the technology being so new
I struggle to use krita and the basic functions are a bit annoying. I find myself having to look up things a lot when I try to use it.
There’s a good Kirby game on the switch that has coop story mode.
This is a dude buying a gaming console for a kid, and he’s already bought it. I would chill a bit lol.
It wasn’t explicit! What if the amount of sorries is stored in a global state? She didn’t necessarily specify 100 more sorries. Women so confusing smh.
Technically 102 if you include the one already said
How do you go about enforcing this when the company goes under? (Almost like healthcare shouldn’t be private lol)
To me this sounded like cdpr merging more with gog not the other way round, as in both your accounts are now under one account?
Yeah, right? Like if they were to just state the same thing again and again, that’s gotta be repetition.
When there’s a limit to the size of a commit message it does make it difficult to actually list all the changes, so sometimes this is all you can write.
I know in theory you’re meant to commit little and often, but in practice it doesn’t always work out that way.
The repetition of the same comment over and over
Yeah now it repeats the same vocab over and over a bit too long and it’s hard to get much use out of it
Astarion’s would hurt the most
I love how all the comments feel the need to say how they’d solve it.
Lol edge at the end got me
I also do programming and am fairly used to the terminal, and I still have a headache when thinking of going back to linux, because even when I want to do something as simple as watching netflix on firefox I had to go through a maze of troubleshooting via the terminal to get the correct packages installed. I can’t imagine what someone who isn’t tech savvy who tries to switch to linux would do.
The user experience on linux and its distributions just aren’t there for the everyday user, and until they are, windows will always be the preferable choice because it actually works. You don’t have to end up having a dispute with it on some arbitrary software download because it doesn’t quite like it, and have to wrangle through many software alternatives that aren’t always available or even anywhere near feature ready because they aren’t available on the platform.
The thing with your first statement is there’s so many times dealing with software when you are meant to just click ‘yes I’m sure’ that I’ve become desensitised to those warnings.
I think of Google Docs now because the inconvenience of not being able to have word on my own system without a price caused me to use the free alternative.
I didn’t laugh at all reading them, and I did occasionally lose track of the plot, but I absolutely enjoyed the books for their creativity and writing. I found it flowed well, and it was like looking into how the author thinks and feels. As with all art though, the experience is very subjective.
I think the tree didn’t give way when it should have and damaged it a bit, hard to tell though