Oh, I use both, I was just poking fun. That being said, I unfortunately I don’t feel comfortable trying to get my parents on Linux… or even friends.
Most people just want things to work and won’t do any sort of troubleshooting themselves. “It just works” is worth the intrusiveness that comes with Windows.
And Linux fanboys will get up on their high horses while googling how to fix their driver issues.
And even with that… I gave it a shot for a while… But unfortunately, it is nowhere near as good as Google’s swipe/glide typing. I was constantly having to fix words or just not use the swipe typing at all.
I think the answer here is much simpler than that.
It’s warmer early Nov than it is in Dec so putting them up is more enjoyable.
And taking it down later is just pure laziness.
This is such a great idea. I will definitely be doing this next year!
This is the advice I always give people. You have to have some small goal in mind. Learn the basics of the language how to get started and then just start programming. When you run into a problem, Google it. As you work through the problems, you’ll learn how to handle them going forward (for the most part).
I’m not alone! Been a dev for almost 10 years and every time I declare and initialize a dictionary I either have to Google it or stare at it for a minute to realize what I’m doing wrong 😂 I blame JSON.
I went into this with some light curiosity and now I want to build a game using godot. The way he explains everything is very clear and concise. Very good tutorials.
Side note: I never realized it was pronounced ‘guh-doh’. My uncultured mind thought it was go-dot’.
Also happens with old.programming.dev