

Or you coukd just use Arch without installing an AUR helper?


Or you coukd just use Arch without installing an AUR helper?
I tried the same user, and it worked for me just now. Thanks for working on this project!
Just fyi, I tried one your instance. Searched a user, clicked a result, and got an error.
Error
./app.lua:134: attempt to concatenate field 'username' (a nil value)
Traceback
stack traceback:
./app.lua:134: in function 'handler'
...ittygram/lua_modules/share/lua/5.1/lapis/application.lua:185: in function 'resolve'
...ittygram/lua_modules/share/lua/5.1/lapis/application.lua:216: in function <...ittygram/lua_modules/share/lua/5.1/lapis/application.lua:214>
[C]: in function 'xpcall'
...ittygram/lua_modules/share/lua/5.1/lapis/application.lua:214: in function 'dispatch'
/apps/kittygram/lua_modules/share/lua/5.1/lapis/nginx.lua:231: in function 'serve'
content_by_lua(nginx.conf.compiled:92):2: in main chunk


Improved hardware capabilities used to come very quickly (see Moore’s Law and Dennard Scaling). However that trend is basically over, so getting higher performance hardware takes a lot of effort to make hardware specialized for certain tasks. That’s why you see there inference accelerators like Groq, SambaNova, Cerebrus, etc. However this is hardware that still is gonna go into data centers. Something innovative has to happen on the AI side for commercial-grade models to be runnable on consumer hardware.


Star Fox Zero. Sure, the story was a repeat of old game, but the gameplay was not. The controls needed more polish, but ultimately I thought the gameplay was great. I actually didn’t mind the motion controls. Most of what people complained about didn’t bother me or felt overblown.
In vim you can make some changes to a file, close vim, and then reopen the files, and then undo your changes, i.e. your undo history persists across sessions.
I use helix part-time but am forced to go back to neovim a majority of the time for a few reasons:
If 1 and 2 got fixed, I’d be a full time helix user


I think you have it backwards. Coding games is complicated, and that’s why AI can’t be used to code them effectively.
I’ve been playing Sekiro lately. While it’s not generally on the top of “immersive games” lists, I find it immersive because of how cool the gameplay makes you feel. When you are just completely focused on timing each parry and reading the attacks of your enemy, it makes me feel like I’m actually in the game doing these feats. Combine that with the fact there are few cutscenes and little dialogue, and I’d say it feels pretty immersive.


You got a source for that last sentence? I’m inclined to degree, but I’d love to see a a concrete explanation proving it.


Biggest con of KDE + Krohnkite (to me) is no text-based config. I really have no desire to pour through the GUI to set up all my keybinds. I’ve tried this setup before, and honestly I mostly like it. However anytime I want to change something I just hate having to click through a menu with my mouse. The search bar helps, but often you’ll spend a lot of time guessing what the devs decided to name a setting. I went back to Sway and have no regrets. Though I’ll admit I wish there was something that was basically Sway with the benefits you mentioned here.
kitty. The ssh kitten is enough reason to use it. I work ob a lot of different systems that require OTP. Using the ssh kitten I can type the OTP once and can spawn new terminals that ssh and cd to the remote direvtory without logging in again. Obviosly the tabs and window panes are are a must too. There’s tons of other useful features that I like, like using hints to select nunbers, filenames, urls, etc in the terminal output.
I remember easily getting gems for free. Also the streak basically doesn’t matter at all. What made me uninstall is the slow pace. It felt like I was stuck on the same words and topics forever. It felt like I was not actually learning anything, which if you’ve ever started learning a language if a formal setting, is very apparent.


Isn’t that how all physical media works?


with kitty you can open a new terminal session that sets it’s cwd to the remote directory of the server you’re ssh’d into. Honestly the only thing I can think of that termux can do that kitty can’t is saving sessions
This genZ-bait soundtrack is making what looks like pretty cool gameplay look incredibly lame. Too many of these GaaS titles that inevitably enshittify use this same marketing to the point where it gives a Pavlovian signal to stay away.


Not anymore. They are owned by Songtradr now


I don’t know why an MSN link was used instead of a direct link to the article:
https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/microsoft-is-warping-the-pc-industry/
I would argue that it is better to have two separate drives for the installation. It simplifies things for non tech savvy people, and I believe Windows has less of an opportunity to mess with your linux install, such as messing with the efi partition.
Ideally there is a twist where they all turn out to be toxic, and pest control-senpai clears them out.