

Tariffs are paid by the importer so it will just make your feeds more expensive to import to your device.
Tariffs are paid by the importer so it will just make your feeds more expensive to import to your device.
When they dropped sms support I was no longer able to convince people to migrate to signal.
Before I could make the argument that you need one sms app anyway so that app might just as well be Signal instead of the one that comes preloaded with your phone. That way people would gradually get more and more secure messaging as time went on. When sms support was dropped, Signal could not replace an existing app and adding another messing app is much less appealing than replacing one.
I haven’t been excited for vscode releases for a long time. It’s all just AI functionality, which I couldn’t care less about.
It’s always been like this for most repositories that make up Android. The few projects that were truly developed in the open, such as ART, will now follow the same private branches as the rest of Android.
Yes, if you want it to. There is a pwa button that appears on pwa supported sites that lets you toggle between app window mode and normal browse tab mode.
Fullscreen will hide the window decorations, but that won’t solve the use case of “behaving like a desktop application”. I use PWAs for websites that are applications (Outlook, Teams, Spotify etc). I want these windows to be dedicated to those applications and nothing else. They should appear in my window list on alt+tab, not be able to navigate away to something else etc.
Similarly, Rubino says web apps in Firefox will not use a minimal browser frame and will continue to show a main toolbar with address bar, extensions, bookmarks
But why, the whole purpose is to behave like a stand alone app.
I would go with a trunk based approach. In other words no other long lived branches other than main. Push for review often and merge to main as soon as it’s approved.
If you don’t see a need for a more complex branch strategy, you probably don’t need it. Branches are always an increased risk for conflicts and can be a pain to resolve.
I switched at about the same time. I miss being in my twenties. 😋
My employer is forcing us to migrate from Debian to Ubuntu because they want access to paid support. Holy crap, I hate snap so much.
I try to follow Bash strict mode. It can protect you from some foot shooting.
No thanks
Yes, unstable Debian is still hella stable. But you probably don’t want to suggest it as the first Linux dust since you need some extra carefulness when updating.
You cannot seed files that are altered. It’s not the same files anymore.
So yes, as long as you want to continue sending, you need to keep the original files around.
When a colleague generated a dia graph for each git object that got created when he made a few commits. Understanding the underlying data model was a real aha moment. 13 years later and I’m still grateful for his “mini git course”.
Gnome with the gTile extension is quite nice.
I see, sorry for the noise.
It’s enough that you have read the code before implementing an alternative to get into legal trouble.
If it works and you are still figuring things out, I suggest not taking specific action right now. Use your package manager to keep your system up to date and it will deal with this in due time.
I was joking too. 😅
If anyone hasn’t learned how tariffs work by now, they are choosing to be ignorant.