And King Crimson fans!
And King Crimson fans!
To be fair, except for GOG, none of the games bought on digital stores are ever really yours. See the recent debacle about The Crew.
I wasn’t calling out anyone on anything! I’m perfectly aware “1%” was a hyperbole, but I’m genuinely curious about crypto projects that aren’t snake oil.
You f*d up at the part where you didn’t start explaining in song, orchestra and all.
git: 'go' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
The most similar command is
log
Any examples of the 1%? Outside of a few cryptocurrencies, I don’t think I’ve ever seen a project self-identified as “crypto” that wasn’t a con
Isn’t it true specifically on Windows, because the Windows implementation of OpenGL is lacking, but false on Linux?
Might be enough for touch-based interfaces though, or fingers don’t have a 4K resolution either.
There are simpler and better solutions than Sublime for that use case, IMO.
Both are text editors, but VSCode’s plugin system and various config options can turn it a fully fledged IDE for the languages of your choice.
Besides, Sublime is exactly that: good, old.
You’re comparing compiled executables to scripts, it’s apples and oranges.
The IPA is a lot more efficient in that regard! It’s international so it’s valid for all languages, whereas phonetic spelling is easier to learn but changes from language to language.
But there already is a device that answer that specific need, so it wouldn’t make sense for the Raspberry 5 to replace it.
Isn’t the Pi 3B still available for that kind of job?
Best UI out of all the clients I’ve tested! Snappy and the haptics make it feel really great.
Does it still have that bug where it disconnects you when it doesn’t find the network?
Last update was from more than one year ago, last I checked. Has it been updated since?
I haven’t, but what would they bring to the table? Would they allow specific tweaks like xrandr?
You may be more used to bash, but after having tinkered with both and converted some scripts from one to the other, I arrived to the conclusion that both are bad.
I’m pretty sure Microsoft will be developing software emulation layer for Windows ARM, so it can support backwards compatibility on as many kinds of ARM processors as possible. But since Snapdragon is only claiming that this works on the X Elite, it’s either a matter of performance, or hardware restrictions?