also, IRC logs are usually public and searchable. that’s actually how we got hunter2
Bio at @optimal@calckey.social
also, IRC logs are usually public and searchable. that’s actually how we got hunter2
watch -n1 date
As an Emacs user, Neovim was like chains. Shackles.
Vim lacks anything good, except maybe the keybindings.
Fucking hate YAML. With every fibre of my being. YAML needs tO GTFO
they took over the rest of the internet, now they’re coming for you.
seriously, where are their parents?
yes.
oh, you haven’t seen nothing yet. you know the lisp-y, hackable goodness you get in emacs? what if an init system was that hackable, and configured with a lisp? go give GNU shepherd a try.
I just let it do partitioning automatically, or do it manually with GNOME Disks.
I just mean, do you ever get scared of showing hidden files in your hone directory? My install isn’t even a year old, and I do.
How does your home directory look?
oh, the init system. these days, systemd is the default, although other init systems do have their vocal proponents.
I’ve been using LogSeq. The outliner model is extremely powerful and can do a lot, but the exporting capabilities are limited, which pushed me to Emacs, Org and Org Roam, which I am still figuring out.
rocks break. humans biodegrade. so no.
LogSeq also supports Org (which is what it was originally designed for), which is phenomenal for an Emacs user like me.
Even native apps usually use cross-platform toolkits which usually have very good Linux support. E.g. Qt, .NET, WxWidgets, GTK (maybe)
I don’t know, that was my experience on KDE. I got it to behave and look the way I wanted, but it was slow, buggy, and prone to crashing. I’ve never gone near anything “customizable” since.
the KDE users really are being salty with this one
take a look at the Spritely Institute.