

On SteamOS maybe, but he is using Arch Linux on his Steam Deck, as mentioned in the Article.
On SteamOS maybe, but he is using Arch Linux on his Steam Deck, as mentioned in the Article.
I did never say anything against it, I just said why that’s not feasible for everyone.
BTW: If you don’t want to use FreeCAD, Fusion360 works completely fine in Linux using this helper. Again: this is not to say that you should not use FreeCAD, it’s just more information for other people reading this thread.
sadly if you do PC gaming you are sometimes forced to use windows. If all your friends play League of Legends it doesn’t help you to say “but DotA 2 runs on Linux”, you need windows or you can’t play with your friends. Same goes for lots of Multiplayer games like GTA Online.
All the tools and stuff I agree. But for games there just is no option other than Windows sometimes
You can continue to used supervised, the difference is that it’s no longer officially supported. TBH, almost all supervised installations weren’t officially supported anymore, so nothing big changes
If you think about it, the kubernetes nodes often are only raspberry pis specwise. 2-4 cores, 8-16gb of ram
My last bean to cup machine cost 180€, my new one costs 600€. Most espresso machines cost more than that, some people pay 180€ for just the grinder alone
Blender had a reeeeaaally long way though, I remember a time where Blender was quite big already but Maya just was miles ahead in terms of usability. Nowadays they are not only even, Blender is probably used more often since it’s not only free but more people know how to use it than Maya
Do you not have the browser open all the time? Not necessarily in the foreground, but at least in the background I always have a browser window. But tbh, most of the time it’s in the foreground on the second monitor
here in Germany the self-checkouts mostly have a cash machine so you can pay cash without a person there
Also then there are Jour Fixes and standups for the side projects you got rented out too and and and
But it’s also important to learn that comments should be brief and concise. We have one file from an ex-dev in which there are 750 lines of code and 2000 lines of comment, when someone wants to maintain this code they always have a hard time because this many comments are taking up so much screen real estate that you can’t find the code that actually does stuff
The problem is that a lot of people don’t understand when to ignore the rules and just stick with them forever.
We had a developer once that always said KISS KISS KISS whenever we pointed out that her functions are working but not reusable, so she wrote 20 functions that all did the same thing, but with slightly different parameters. And that’s just one of the examples
with Premium Brand paper towels it really doesn’t matter, you can let the pan cool down and then wipe it with the paper towel. Works really good