I’ve never met a desktop GUI bigger than a single page with buttons that wasn’t messy and complicated.
Granted, I’m used to Qt in C++ and python, so I don’t think I’m the best sample collector.
I’ve never met a desktop GUI bigger than a single page with buttons that wasn’t messy and complicated.
Granted, I’m used to Qt in C++ and python, so I don’t think I’m the best sample collector.
Type checkers are your friend if you can enforce them. I’ve started using them in my new projects and find that they make those types of bugs harder to sneak in, especially if you’re strict about requiring type hints/definitions in your functions and classes.
I like ty, but it’s immature. Check out Pyright as well.


I’ll see what I can do.


For anyone interested, I was able to find the first two seasons. Working on a safe way to distribute.


DMd
We build off develop and only update master once a year or so. Our company also pays 4 V&V engineers, compared to 9 software devs.
After a release cycle, we update master. Master has never, never been built by itself.


I’m actually not sure you’re right… isn’t the metaphor a horse wearing a bridle with a bit in their mouth? When they’re excited to move they literally chomp on the bit.
If both h264 and hevc are stuttering using hardware decoding, something might be wrong. Try setting up Apollo or sunshine on your remote PC, and add Moonlight to your deck using the desktop App Store.
There are lots of guides online for how to install Moonlight and add it to your deck’s games list.
If that works smoothly with hardware decoding, then the problem is with remote play.
I wrote out the rest of this before rereading your post and want to put it out there for others:
If you’re having issues with hevc, switch back to h264.
Hevc is more computationally complex to encode/decode, so if you’re trying to do either with software, then it would be better to use the less compressed h264.
Network congestion over WiFi, as you pointed out, is often also a culprit.
What is your domicile like? An apartment with lots of nearby apartments? Freestanding house? WiFi congestion gets worse with more people using it.
If you have a dock, plug in an Ethernet cable to the dock and try streaming that way. Does it mitigate your stutter?
If so, turn down the bandwidth as much as you can and check (e.g 720p at 30 fps).
If it is that, buying a higher quality wifi access point may help.


OnlyOffice local editors is probably the best drop in replacement for Microsoft office’s basic suite I have found. I’m a professional Linux user stuck in a company that depends on Microsoft products.
Doesn’t cover email, but is very good for everything else.
Can also edit PDF files, sort of. Doesn’t always format well on conversion from PDF to editable, but still workable in some cases


Huh? Since when does handbrake not support GPU encoding? I know it usually supports the Nvidia encoding backend for mkv…


Most settings average “Facebook machine” users need are available on common distros without touching a console.
Unless you want to emulate common windows software. Then only God can save you.
I use Arch, btw


All true. The point is that win 11 doesn’t support a lot of old hardware that’s perfectly usable, just doesn’t have TPM2.0 chips built into them. There are some hacks around it, but it takes a great deal of desire and proficiency to make them work.
Reminds me of the liminal spaces subreddit. Not sure we have a Lemmy version?
I think the voiceover was added for YouTube, but I’m pretty sure that footage came from a game in 1991 “Zero Wing”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_your_base_are_belong_to_us


I had the same experience. Nano is great if you’re used to notepad or a generic, limited text editor.
Once you learn a terminal editor like eMacs or vim, why go back? So much less hand motion going to mouse, arrows, and back.


It’s remarkably difficult to really fuck up freebsd. On Linux, getting boots to fail is easy. FreeBSD is quite a bit more robust in that regard, as the base image isn’t updated piecemeal.


Signal’s defaults are pretty good about that. Push notifications are both opt-in and the information they send can be selected by the user. You can have it say “new message” and that’s it. Or the senders name. Or the whole message.
I agree that it’s not intuitive that that’s a leak to most people, but push notifications are kind of wonky how they work.


No matter how good the protocol or client encryption, your privacy is only as good as your own physical security for the device in question.
Given that if you lose your private key, there is no recovery, I would be surprised if there were real back doors in the clients. Maybe unintentional ways to leak data, but you can go look for yourself: https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Android
They have one for each client.
I was able to beat him 3 or 4 days ago, after the rock pile thing wasn’t part of the fight anymore.
Overwhelming force: strength build, vulnerability , and the card that gives you strength when you lose health on your turn, combined with multiple cards that triggered damage, and a power that dealt 1 hp damage at the beginning of my turn.
Accept that you will lose a few cards and build redundancies.
I’ll look up my build later.