Valve releasing Proton.
Valve releasing Proton.
Under GDPR this kind of data collection and sharing HAS to be opt-in i.e. with an informed consent. You can’t just bury it in your TOS and/or privacy policy. The user has to be explicitly shown what they are collection, on what basis they are doing it and how they are using it, then give the user the choice to accept or decline that, and they have to respect that decision.
Best Fallout game ever.
Diablo 2, Deus Ex Human Revolution, Mass Effect 1
If this is supposed to be a comparison for Kotlin developers why are all the Spring Boot examples in Java instead of Kotlin?
The whole article also is more of a what Ktor is and why it’s better instead of actually comparing the two.
It can’t be removed. That info comes straight from the hardware itself (UEFI and individual devices).
This command won’t show the real values when using btrfs. You need to use sudo btrfs filesystem usage <mount point>
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So my TLDR, is that its possible to be a USER without touching the terminal, but I dont think its possible to be an administrator without.
Suse with Yast makes it possible to administer just with GUI. Not 100% sure if it can do absolutely everything possible but it has lots of tools.
Have an idea which might solve this.
When the host routing table is like this:
$route
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
default 192.168.102.1 0.0.0.0 UG 600 0 0 wlp19s0f4u1u1
default RT-AC86U-6D60 0.0.0.0 UG 20100 0 0 enp15s0
the VM has internet connection. If the defaults are the other way around it doesn’t.
This sounds reasonable. Curiously now that I tried again with both host lan & wlan active there was no problem. I have a hunch the routing depends on which interface networkmanger starts first.
$route
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
default 192.168.102.1 0.0.0.0 UG 600 0 0 wlp19s0f4u1u1
default RT-AC86U-6D60 0.0.0.0 UG 20100 0 0 enp15s0
192.168.2.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 100 0 0 enp15s0
192.168.100.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 virbr1
192.168.102.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 600 0 0 wlp19s0f4u1u1
192.168.122.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 virbr0_
Learn Groovy
Stay away from Groovy. It’s a horrible language. It’s quick to write but slow and difficult to read. It’s conventions make it a very error prone.
Link to the things you mention e.g. you say to get familiar with Loom. When searching for that all I get is some screen recording software (probably not what you meant).
Scala pays better than Java or Kotlin
According to what research?
Currently EEA consists of the EU states + some other European countries.
It’s good to live in the EU where such terms don’t apply.
Removing a pattern doesn’t unfortunately remove the packages it installs. Only the pattern “package” is removed.
If you taboo a pattern it and the packages it would install will never be installed automatically. I tend to taboo those games patterns.
They are the “patterns” others mentioned.
They address that bad wording on subscription in the comments in that blog. If you have a fallback license to v. 2024.1 or newer the feature will stay active even if you stop your subscription.
Have you tried Okular?