maybe they like the look?
maybe they like the look?
This is the absolute worst advice for coming to a European country. It’s probably different in Denmark but for some countries or cities at least you won’t be able to get through the bureaucracy needed to legally immigrate without speaking the language. Even in offices that mainly help foreigners you may find the employees don’t speak English. And if you want to be there long-term, good luck making real connections if you don’t speak the language.
I think or rather hope he confused vacation days with bank holidays.
looks like normal variation in a persons lettering to me. compare the k in textbook with the k in skibidi, almost the same. distances between letters and especially risers as well are similar between the two sections.
he did mention isolationist, so… we’d also have to consider how the eastern front would have evolved without lend-lease. not a historian so perhaps consensus is the Nazis still wouldn’t have had a chance, but still
apart from solar and batteries, they also seem to be doing quite well on wind and train infrastructure
my only criticism is that it isn’t old-fashioned enough. if we’re reaching back to old names, why not go all the way and pick a name like Ælfgifu
It’s one thing to just use the software, it’s another to open bug tickets that you expect the maintainer to prioritise. It’s free software, the maintainer doesn’t have to do anything for you. If they want tickets fixed with high priority, they should work something out with the maintainer.
X11 being reliable because Xorg devs aren’t stupid
Not gonna disagree with the rest of what you said, but the Xorg devs and Wayland devs are mostly the same people
Because you can’t (easily) program gui apps to automate tasks, but combining a few terminal programs to get more complex behaviour is really easy
The cup looked rather big to me, but I didn’t know how big 44oz was. Guys, it’s 1.3 liters! Why tf are they carrying a 1.3 liter cup? Do they really drink that much in one day?
That’s very much not true. Workdays would typically last around 6 hours, not including multiple breaks during the day. Also, your employer would usually provide the food for lunch, and it was acceptable to have a nap in the afternoon.
In winter, even shorter days were common to account for the reduction in daylight. If you were ill, you’d simply not show up and not get paid. In fact it was normal for people to only work for what they needed in the immediate future and stop showing up as soon as they had enough for the week
So from within vim :!pkill vim
?
Vpns rely on encryption, which this bill will undermine.
Yes please, I would love not being able to scan comments to see if they are relevant to what I’m trying to do
You could use jq, which will work no matter how the json is formatted.
Without trying it out, something like the following might work:
jq '.path.to.key.to.change |= 11' file.json > file.json.tmp && mv file.json.tmp file.json
it works great on desktop using mouse too