

I’ve never been into vector graphics, but I had reason to use Inkscape recently, and I was actually surprised by how easy to use it was and how much the UI made sense.
I’ve never been into vector graphics, but I had reason to use Inkscape recently, and I was actually surprised by how easy to use it was and how much the UI made sense.
If you push the second button down on the right-hand side, it’ll usually mute them, even if it isn’t labelled to indicate that.
I’ve got things that need to run periodically set up in crontab, and create menu launchers for things that I run as needed.
The first time I took it, my mom wasn’t happy that my score was low, so she demanded that I be tested again, and told me she’d buy me ice cream if I did better. The second time, I was miraculously a genius.
I used to work for the female version of this guy.
With Ollama, all you have do is copy an extra folder of ROCm files. Not hard at all.
With an AMD RX 6800 + 32gb DDR4, I can run up to a 34b model at an acceptable speed.
I lived there as a baby, and learned to speak there. After we moved to the US, my mother forced me into speech therapy for years.
My distro struggles despite being one of the more widely-used and known. There are never enough people to do everything that needs to be done. And I see constantly that projects I care about don’t have enough help to fix bugs, test, or continue development. FOSS is a community effort. Not every user needs to be a professional, but everyone should learn enough about how a computer works to be able to contribute in some way. Everything being done by a few frustrated, overworked people isn’t healthy or sustainable.
FOSS software needs to be maintained by the user base to survive. Not enough people contributing is a big problem for many, if not most, open source projects, including the big names. If not enough people care enough to learn, the project dies out and disappears.
I agree. I remember when skim milk and margarine were supposed to be good for you. Beans and peas already exist, are cheap, store forever, and can be used in so many different ways. Fake meat feels like an overly complicated way to solve a problem that’s already solved, with the added bonus that they could cause horrific health problems that won’t be identified for decades.
Very true! Good points.
After years of using Linux, the last time I used Vim, I remembered for the first time how to go into command mode, exit, and save the file I was editing without looking anything up.
I liked Snaps and Flatpaks fine when I first started using Linux, and the distro I was on treated them the same as software in the repo, but I eventually started to avoid them because of the space they take up, and because I got tired of constantly having to mess around with permissions to try to get things working. Now, if something isn’t available in rpm, I use AppImage or a tarball, or compile it myself.
You can edit system files with a GUI text editor by opening the containing folder as root in a GUI file manager, then opening the file you want to edit from there.
All pollinators are good pollinators.
It seems like most people these days have lights mounted on their house that shine all night long, or turn on automatically every time something moves outside. My boyfriend thinks those are a good idea, but so far I’ve managed to talk him out of it.
It’s difficult to find a pesticide, even one intended for casual gardeners, that doesn’t advertise that it kills hundreds of different types of insects.
That’s amazing.
That’s beautiful. Card backs?