I actually don’t use the “tree” part of it at all. I don’t get it either. It just happens to be easier to wrangle into what I want than other options like sideberry.
I actually don’t use the “tree” part of it at all. I don’t get it either. It just happens to be easier to wrangle into what I want than other options like sideberry.
for number 4, I use the tree-style-tabs addon and some custom userchrome css to get that and it works great. I have it set so that when you hover over the 4-pixel wide sliver that I leave visible (could make it transparent, I just appreciate the reminder that it’s there), it pops out to be 260 pixels wide. I wish it wouldn’t need that level of customization, but it does work.
You can use Nix with basically any Linux distribution. Here is my Librewolf config as an example: https://codeberg.org/jevans/nix-config/src/branch/main/homeManagerModules/gui-applications/firefox/default.nix
I had a similar issue in my city. I had to talk to the human resources division at my organization, and they were able to work directly with the local transit agency to get me a physical card, but it was a pain, and it certainly wasn’t advertised as possible anywhere. It may be worth trying to call people and ask.
lol I do love this video
ffmpeg can make you breakfast if you try hard enough lol. It’s so versatile
With ffmpeg in windows, you can listen to a UDP stream using the ffplay
command. you can set up a udp stream as an output in ffmpeg in Linux. I would set up a virtual sink that goes nowhere in pulseaudio or pipewire to set as your output device and have ffmpeg listen to that sink. There are lots of options in ffmpeg available to tweak latency and quality.
I agree! I was certainly starting to look into forks or other alternatives, but it was “settled”. Eelco stepped down and a constitutional assembly was created to develop a governance structure.
https://github.com/NixOS/nix-constitutional-assembly?tab=readme-ov-file
The Nix ecosystem would have to fall apart.
I considered doing this a few months ago. I ultimately decided that for my use, it’s easy enough to just memorize the road network in my city, so I did that instead. This was the navigation software I was planning to use: https://github.com/navit-gps/navit
for a more low-level discussion for fundamentals, Ben Eater has 5 videos going over PS/2 keyboards and then USB keyboards. Here is the first video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aXbh9VUB3U
Its 4 EUR per 3 months or 11 EUR per year
with that being the case, correct me if I’m wrong, but your pitch is that users should trust your manually compiled and maintained commands to install things because you’re guaranteeing that the binaries being installed by your commands are from official sources, and that is better (in at least some cases) than cached binaries from something like nixpkgs, where the trust we are asked to give is that the cache is built correctly from source.
right, that’s what nix does if you build from source
Genuine question: Why would I use this as opposed to Nix? Between nixpkgs and the NUR, there are an insane amount of packages available, and you can build everything from source if you wish.
I use the floccus extension with Nextcloud as a backend for bookmarks/tabs and wallabag for read-it-later
This hugo theme works well: https://jamstackthemes.dev/theme/hugo-lynx/
for a non-self-hosted, but neat alternative: https://weird.one/
https://beets.io/
This is what I use