I mean for privacy things it makes sense to avoid leaking anything. But I fail to understand where the danger is to have anonymous data that says a user installed “Ubuntu-24.04-wappity-whatever.iso” to “KINGSTON DATA TRAVELER 32GB” at some point.
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Not necessarily broken, just not updated recently. Some games might be fine as is
Thanks. I generally buy my beers from such shops, because regular stores don’t sell that many types. I’ll check if they have some next time.
Some of my favourites are from l’Hermitage, la Caracole or la Brasserie de la Seine. But there are so many breweries and choices that I could drink a different one every day for the whole year.
Try to avoid the popular exports (Leffe for example), there are a lot of breweries that make generally better beers :)
Plus if you got some recommendations for German beers I’m all ears
Weird, all the Germans I’ve drank Belgian beer with called it far better than what they were used to
/jk, couldn’t resist trying to assert the beer superiority of my tiny country :)
Go had the same behavior until recently. Closures captures the variable from the for loop and it was a reference to the value.
They changed it because it’s “common” in Go to loop over something and run a goroutine that uses the variable defined in the loop. Workaround was to either shadow the variable with itself before the loop, or to pass the value as an argument.
It’s been a long time since I wrote c# so idk if the same is expected from the avg dev, but in Go it’s really not explicit that the variable will be a reference instead of a plain value
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Firefox becomes slow after a couple of weeks open52·5 months agoI have multiple Firefox windows with around 1-1.5k tabs on each, and they have been opened (and re opened) since about a year.
I ❤️ tabs, they make me feel all warm on the inside
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Linus Torvalds Lands A 2.6% Performance Improvement With Minor Linux Kernel Patch2·7 months agohttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox.
Edit: the other comment below mentioning this did not load initially…
Funnily enough, the steam deck has been used during the conflict to control remote weapons. So they could be implicated in this if you go far enough
Wow, I didn’t know that being a Linux/open source contributor meant you don’t have to follow your country’s laws.
It’s developed internationally but devs still reside somewhere and have to abide by the rules at that place. Linux in this case being represented by an US entity means they have to follow the gov’s sanctions. If you want more or less of those, that’s where (the government) you act.
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Privacy@lemmy.ml•PSA Use your display name to help move others to privacy respecting replacements.1·7 months agoNot really. See the support page regarding this:
As a new default, your phone number will no longer be visible to everyone in Signal. You can opt to display your phone number. However, people who have your number saved in their phone’s contacts will still see your phone number, regardless of your settings, since they already know it.
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Privacy@lemmy.ml•PSA Use your display name to help move others to privacy respecting replacements.21·7 months agoThey know my phone number. Which in Europe is tied to me. They absolutely hold info about who talks to who
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•When I'm attempting to get updates from the upstream, but the git server is down2·7 months agoI get what you mean. GitHub and friends have pushed that back to a more centralized approach. However I think that it’s not too bad actually. Most projects tend to be centralized too
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•When I'm attempting to get updates from the upstream, but the git server is down16·7 months agoI mean, it’s decentralized alright, but it doesn’t mean it’s HA or automatically replicated. You can just use a different origin server and push/pull from it instead.
Dang, I see this as I’m waiting for my pinetime to arrive. On paper it seemed okay, and the latest versions seem to have improved the battery life. Will see once I receive it
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Why is changing the keyboard layout so complicated in Windows compared to GNU + Linux and other normal OSes?1·8 months ago??? You’re just baiting now lol
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Why is changing the keyboard layout so complicated in Windows compared to GNU + Linux and other normal OSes?11·8 months agoYeah it has its place. Just not in a Linux community. Is that hard to understand?
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Why is changing the keyboard layout so complicated in Windows compared to GNU + Linux and other normal OSes?2·8 months agoExcept my layout (bepo) is not in any specific locale and was installed manually. So I don’t think this would work
Orygin@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Why is changing the keyboard layout so complicated in Windows compared to GNU + Linux and other normal OSes?23·8 months agoThis is a Linux community. Not sure what you imagine most people here think of windows…
Or work together and do the job in half the time and enjoy the rest