Ahaha. That hurts.
Pro-Tip: Even if you don’t program in Python, it might be necessary for several of your applications.
Programmer by day, burnt out by night.
Ahaha. That hurts.
Pro-Tip: Even if you don’t program in Python, it might be necessary for several of your applications.
They have done 4 year windows before, and we still cannot know for sure how long for example the macbook m1 will be supported, still.
That said, 4-7 years for a laptop of that price seems short, I also don’t understand why they have to bring mobile OS support windows to laptops in the first place.
When it comes to update support, it seems odd to me to recommend Apple’s computers when they literally have a mobile OS’ support window to the OS.
Have you not pushed it yet? I can’t see it anywhere.
Although, Apple also just decides to make updates unavailable for your device once it’s a few years old, so there’s that.
Windows on a Dell XPS laptop was a good experience, firmware (and Windows) updates always came instantly. With Linux I have to keep an eye out for BIOS updates from time to time but Dell does not shy away from releasing BIOS updates for an over 7 years old laptop. Probably because their newer laptops use the same BIOS, but still!
Ah shit, he added Twitter discourse led by Elon to it
You’re not disproving their point, though.
If anything, if the opposition is like this, it makes them seem all the more credible…
Why are you using Vim for this? Vim actually allows you to change the cursor position and select text with the mouse if your terminal supports it.
TBH, “reveals itself by shivving you anyway” is probably closer to the truth with Brittons and their tea.
Goodbye.
Man, AskOuija is starting to leak out
DDG makes it quite the statement that they don’t personalise your search in any way, to the point where you can pick which country’s tailored results you want from a dropdown.
I do exactly this but with a little shell script that just has some rsync -av
and mv -f
calls instead of dragging and dropping.
Not yet, but if every system was only protected against what already happened instead of also what could happen, we’d get hacked a lot more often!
Looks like he’s been a doctor, so he should be OK.
I’m running (Ubuntu based) Mint Cinnamon. My laptop came with Ubuntu pre-installed and thus the BIOS pre-configured.
If I put the laptop to sleep and wake it from sleep again, it messed up the fonts but only VEEERY occasionally.
The fingerprint scanner doesn’t work with any of the drivers/software I’ve tried, which is a huge bummer.
When I dual-booted Windows on it for software for school, I noticed it worked splendidly on Windows without any installation.
The battery life went from 11h to 40m during my normal usage, this happened in a span of 4 years.
I’ve replaced the battery with an aftermarket one, which also went from 9h to 2h battery life in about 2.5y.
I’ve rarely had the battery drained below 5%, but it did run until the last percentage the few times it happend (on the original battery)
I’ve never had black screens or screen flickering like you described on this laptop, but putting my desktop PC to sleep on Linux Mint does cause it to wake up to an unrecoverable black screen.
My laptop’s also never had the connectivity issues.
Nor anything else.
My experience has been really good, and I plan to continue using this until even a new battery won’t do good.
That might be due to Mint’s pre-installed software, I don’t know.
I could remember wrong, but doesn’t it just use symlinks?
Not even that, Android is enough of a Linux system they really just needed a repo of natively compiled apps.
I know right? English spelling/pronunciation makes no sense!
I’ve worked in a small company’s small team of 3 devs before, it would not have been great for the company if two or all of us went on a holiday at the same time.
It’s far more dangerous to run it without a space between the
-
andrf