It’s also a lot harder today.
Earlier:
a/s/l?
16/f/NYC
Now:
a/s/l?
Pardon me?
a/g/l?
400ppm/fluid/Insta
It’s also a lot harder today.
Earlier:
a/s/l?
16/f/NYC
Now:
a/s/l?
Pardon me?
a/g/l?
400ppm/fluid/Insta
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donair
Interesting. The creation has a Wikipedia page.
Donair? What’s that? Fancy Doner Kebab made with Don Perignon and air?
Finally, a question where i can shine. You don’t have to do anything specific. Just do things.
Use a headset with your phone or laptop: You are on a call. Most people don’t speak much at online meetings.
Take a little nap? Thinking.
Want some time alone? Go to a meeting room. Works even better if the room has glass walls since you can see them and they can see that you are “busy”, but no one sees your screen.
Have multiple monitors. There’s always something work-related on at least one screen.
Have fields of interest that blend in. If one of your hobbies is vaguely related to work you are golden. You can totally read something unrelated to work during working time if it seems most your attention goes towards work. (See multiple screens and some switching back and force.)
Shift your working hours slightly from the norm, i.e. come 5 min earlier than others.
Don’t hide windows with non-work stuff when someone sees them. Too late. Act as if you have nothing to hide.
Do a reasonable work-life blend. Work overtime occasionally at odd hours and make managers know that you solved an emergency in your free time. Gives you an excuse to leave early or slack off the next day and any other day.
React to emails with a resonable delay. Of course, you can help, but not right now. You are busy.
Block your calendar and decline invites.
As a Linux user, you can pretend the os x is just Linux. That’s not true, but you can make it work with brew, some googling and your favourite ide / tech stack.
On the plus side, macs are less problematic to integrate with corporate software. You can run commercial software that’s not available for Linux.
Windows is just Windows. A step back from either Linux or mac. Two steps backed when managed by corporate IT.
Agree for self-hosted apps. However I’m also looking for a service like that one by ente.io. Here it’s more important that they continue to operate. Sure, with open-source you can self-host or find someone else, but this only works if the service is popular. Less popular open source apps disappaer when the developer gives up. The code would still available, but no one will keep it up-to-date.
I’m looking a for photo-storage option for the long-run.
Open-source is not a must, but nice. E2E encryption is not a must, but nice.
I just want to place to store, edit(?), categorize, search, share my photos. And I don’t want to the place to be Google, Apple, or Microsoft. So, this does look interesting.
However, I also want to low-maintenance, low-cost, stable long-term solution. I value convenience.
What options should I consider?
It was a paid service and it still is a paid service. However, now that they open-sourced the server, you can self-host.
This also surprised me. The Debian platform has been terrific over decades, at least for me.
My journey was
Are Mint or Pop_OS better than Ubuntu or Debian? In what way?
Short version: Follow the instructions you received, it will work.
Long version:
If I download the airline’s app to […], will the airline spam me with ads I don’t want?
Probably yes. Or the app just refuses to work. Airline apps deserve the bad app store rating.
Can I both print the boarding pass at home AND get the qr code to print the boarding pass at the kiosk?
With sane airlines, yes. Standard protocol is to use the last boarding pass generated. So, if for any reason, you get a new boarding pass at the airport, you will use this, not the one printed at home or on your phone. Some airlines will not accept the old barcode or it confuses their system.
Apparently there is something called ‘receive boarding pass by sms’. How does this work?
Old system. They will send you an MMS message or a link. If you don’t have internet at the airport, you must download the link before you get there.
Another short version: Always have three things with you:
Booking reference and last name are the magic code that will get you a boarding pass most anywhere.
You can just save your QR code as a picture on your phone, you don’t need internet.
This. OP says they won’t have internet and they don’t seem to fly often. Since most Airline apps are shitty, don’t rely on their app. It could disappear; crash; forget who you are; know who you are, but forget about your flight. This never happens to frequent flyers with the regular airline, but it could totally happen to OP. (And no, it’s not the super-low-cost budget airlines that have shitty apps)
Plot Twist: Windows95man is Linus Torvalds. Have you seen him lately? Maybe that’s his thing now.
The 2nd explicitly says Linux, though.
I’m sorry, I cannot answer this question. ChatGPT is owned by Microsoft now. How dare you bring Linux to party?
Or, oldschool, nerdy and complicated: https://mobile.onlinetvrecorder.com/
Yes, it’s a weird part of Linux history. He wrote the code, which is part of the mainline kernel, and his name is on it. Reaching out before removing this seems natural. They didn’t invite him to a party.
Hans Reiser and ReiserFS were controversial before the murder. I guess, maintainers want some sort of closure and move on.
Why is following lemmy via ActivityPub directly not an option?
They respawn or become zombies.
So Wayland = XinX12 = X is not X
Sounds catchy, xinx, say ksings.
Obviously. It was a nice small PR to fix a typo and a pronoun in a readme file. This is the kind of change where you just press Accept, Merge, and go on with your life.