I just write all my blog posts inside the empty line of this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>My Blog</title>
</html>
Keep it simple, stupid!
I just write all my blog posts inside the empty line of this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>My Blog</title>
</html>
Keep it simple, stupid!
I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe… CRTs on fire from an xorg.conf typo… I configured display servers in the dark cause the screen was black… All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain… Time to switch to Wayland.
I’ve been using Linux for 17 years but they still didn’t issue me my pair of knee-socks. WTF?
Or installing Linux. You’ll still be depressed, but at least you have a good reason now.
By default, it saves all your system logs in a text file, starting from the moment you installed your distro.
journalctl > logs.txt
(don’t actually do this)
It was a fun project to set up a FreeBSD laptop until I stumbled upon the WiFi issue, but I didn’t notice any advantage over just using Debian.
To be fair, people who know which logs to attach and how to get them usually already know enough to troubleshoot the issue by themselves.
Would this allow a fork under a different name or would it have to be rewritten, replacing all original code, like Unix?
I want to see a world where content creators are simply paid by the hour, while they work. Why do they get to still make money off their work 70 years after they died?
Yes, it would probably mean that billion-dollar-movies aren’t viable anymore, and most YouTubers couldn’t live off their videos, but I see that as a good thing.
They were important to boot games that needed most of your limited memory.
umm yes, actually.