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I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as bunny, is in fact, BNU/UYYYY, or as I've recently taken to calling it, :3
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Slackware
I've had too many to recount, but the most recent was trying to swap out video drivers on Pop OS and somehow got the package manager so messed up, I had to reinstall the entire OS.
No, I'm too paranoid when using rm sweepingly, so I tend to triple check before executing.
Secondary machine, but only because my workplace requires to me use Windows.
I tried zsh, fish, and csh in the past, but I always go back to bash.
No. I use it every day. It fears me. (Mostly because I still don't know what I'm doing.)
I don't even recall now... it was the 90s, so probably some sort of stock compaq or packard bell or something like that.
Enough to edit config files over ssh. I don't use it as my main editor.
Overall, CLion, mostly because I appreciate having a consistent, full-featured IDE across OSs. In open source, I'd say valgrind, it's just too useful.
Sometimes basic stuff that "just works" on other OSs is still just a pita on Linux. I spent way too much time trying to get Discord streaming to work properly with Wayland. 3:
It's getting better, but some corners are still hostile to newcomers. Embrace "stupid" questions, we all asked them at one point!
I'm using Pop OS b/c it has a balance of setup ease and familiarity with the Debian distro family. It works.
Por que no los dos?
If I have to touch anything related to audio playback, I'm gonna scream. ALSA, pulseaudio, pipewire, etc... just stay out of my face, I don't wanna think about you.
Stock distro. I don't have time to waste on putting stuff together by hand. The OS is there to enable other software, not take up my attention.
That was the only way you got the right drivers back in the day.
Linux ask game
1 - what was your first distro? 2 - what was your biggest linux fuckup? 3 - have you ever run rm / on real hardware? 4 - do you dual boot or have a secondary machine with windows? 5 - did you change your default shell? 6 - are you afraid of git? 7 - what was the first machine you installed linux on? 8 - do you know your way around vim keybinds? 9 - what is your favourite non-os software? 10- biggest linux pet peeve? 11- biggest annoyance with the community? 12- do you like your current distro? 13- Xenia or Tux? 14- what software are you never using again? 15- stock distro or hours of yak shaving? 16- have you compiled the kernel?
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peachy sylveon doodle page comm for sylla, tysm! ✨commissions: https://ko-fi.com/rabbit/commissions
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edit as you write. use adverbs. use said. outline. or don’t. plot it. pants it. make a mary sue. who cares! just write whatever makes you happy. that’s all this is about. be happy in what you make.
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a wall of motherboards ,,,, she's so beautiful
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cheezy goodness commission for @/justm1llie on twitter!
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shy lil axolotl
commissioned by @/peachhugs on twitter
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reblog if you think it's really hot to share DRM-free ebooks
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i spent a few months working with shakespeare’s globe in london, which is a reconstruction of a theatre built in 1599, which itself is a reconstruction of a theatre built in 1576. obviously this was before they had the ability to put microphones on actors, so one of the big questions scholars had was ‘how did people hear the play?’ turns out, as ppl discovered when they rebuilt the globe, the circular shape of the walls (combined with the springy oak-and-plaster they were made of) create a huge amplifying effect on all sounds emanating from the stage, meaning—even today—everyone can hear just fine. and i was like. why are you surprised by this. why are people shocked that humans of the past actually Knew What They Were Doing. why are people amazed that machu picchu is architecturally genius or surprised that the iliad is devastatingly powerful or stunned that ppl were solving sinusoidal trigonometric equations possibly as early as 350 CE. history is not one long linear march leading up to Today, The Zenith Of Everything & just bc somethings newer doesnt make it better & i am not smarter than the guy who wrote gilgamesh. actually this post is about people who were introduced to star trek by the flashy new stuff and then watched the original series and were, for some reason, shocked that so much of it was “actually good”
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If you don't have this feeling at least once per project, are you even coding? 😄
Oops, found out the way I've structured my entire project is broken.
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Decoding PR Talk (IGN64.com The Magazine #1, 1998)
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