An alias can be used to see who is selling your address. If you give address B to only one organization and you get spam on B, then you know B sold your address.
Not exactly the most useful information, but it’s there.
An alias can be used to see who is selling your address. If you give address B to only one organization and you get spam on B, then you know B sold your address.
Not exactly the most useful information, but it’s there.
Undead are just a lot more vulgar in chinese culture.
The prices are definitely bad. Not that I can criticise…
Those and “First!!!1!!” are obnoxious, but not actively harmful.
And actual scams with 300+ upvotes. Not just copied comments that get edited layer, but entire chains directing people to whatsapp numbers.
As a newcomer to CLIs, GUI are great because you don’t need to know what you’re looking for. I can just open the devices window, and they’re all there, with most of the extra hardware stuff that’s not actually a real device already cleaned out.
To do the same with a CLI would take me 10 minutes of looking up what the hardware commands are, 5 minutes figuring out flags, and 30 minutes researching entries to see if they’re important. Even just a collapsible list would make that last step so much easier. And no, I can’t grep for what I need, because I don’t know what I need, I just know something in there is important with a vague idea of what it might look like.
Once I figure that all out for one thing, the best I can do is write that to a notes file so I don’t need to search so far next time, but there’s a good chance that I’ll need a different combination of commands next time anyway.
Not hating on CLIs, just wishing I could figure out how to use them faster.
Width does affect how many asteroids you need to clear, so I suppose it is astrodynamic.
If you want waydroid to see files on the host, you need to muck around with bind-mounting a directory, or just using abd to move files manually.
I think waydroid can’t see anything beyond itself normally. I had a hell of a time trying to get files on there, so if there’s an easy way to get Waydroid to see files on the host, I couldn’t find it.
I’d say a Control Panel, I miss the plethora of authoritive knowledge and settings for every program, device, driver, network, user, and a dozen more things besides, all findable by browsing and not remembering dozens of commands. Of course I’d miss that either way, because Control Panel has been gutted every new version of windows since XP, but it was once nice.
The Start menu context menu, or SUPER+X, is still nice, although mostly for avoiding poor UI choices and slow menus. The fact that many useful options are guaranteed to be there on every windows machine is nice though.
And I would also say Event Viewer, despite how incredibly clunky it is to use. Having one place to check all system logs and track crashes of all kinds was quite useful.
Basically, windows at one point went out of it’s way to centralize settings and info, and that’s just not possible in Linux without a lot of setup.
I believe they’re talking about the W11 context menu, where most common options (like copy, paste, and delete) are replaced by icons that look almost identical to each other. They’re all soft rounded lines and have no defining features, which means you need to stop and parse the icon twice for every cut & paste. They also change position based on which options are available, so you can’t memorize the locations, and since delete is one of the options, I wouldn’t trust my memory.
Most of the interesting options like edit, run as administrator, open file location, readable copy paste options, or installed options like Edit with Notepad++ or 7zip > are hidden behind a Show more Options option, which just opens the window 10 context menu. Same styling and everything.
Basically, everything about the W11 context menu slows me down and nothing about it is more usable or helpful.
There will come a time when the music is turned down, so I can listen to other things in the background, but currently the music is captivating and amazing!
You could make this more flexible by routing all the wires going to the assembler into a power pole, so replacing the assembler with a different crafter is easy.
Adding more throuput to lower quality teirs might be as easy as adding more crafters. Alternatively, each crafter might be able to become it’s own module, with just one wire connection to other modules and the initial combinators, and the quality be set arbitrarily on each module. If you need more throuput, you can just add another module.
The next step to that is setting the quality of the recipe based on need, with every module always working. Then adding more modules directly increase throuput with no extra thought required.
Pulling the stocked amount out into the constant combinator would be good for readability. Having a readout of stocked amounts might be fun too.
70% of the time, bloom is garbage, 25% of the time it’s garbage and is covering up other graphical issues. 5% of the time, it gives some nice depth to light and emphasizes brightness differences, even without HDR.
Did you know my profile picture is a Windows Vista background? I didn’t until a few months ago.
This exactly. I don’t speak latin and don’t want to.
It would be really nice on less powerful hardware too. One picture gallery can eat all my RAM real fast.
3 3 1|2 1|3 2 1
Nauvis is “NAW - vis”, like gnawing and aravice.
Vulcanus is “Vul - CAN - us”, like Vulcan or Vulcanize
Gleba is more fun like “Glee - ba”, but usually ends up being “glebbah”.
Fulgora is “Full - GORE - ah” but I originally misread the name and said “Full - GROW - ah”.
Aquilo is usually “A - QUILL - oh” but I accept arguments to pronounce it like Aquilae.
The DLC is two words: “Space - Age”. Spaceage is whatever is dumped off a platform.
Those are Rare panels, if you didn’t notice.
Most entities have been changed to display all the signals on the input and output networks. It’s very helpful.
I found this bug report thread for KDE, and Chris posted a couple possible solution in there. Seems like a good starting point.