This is an insane take based on absolutely nothing.
I Am Incredibly Strong & And Handsome
This is an insane take based on absolutely nothing.
It is my understanding that a lot of thought and care is put into the design language and appearance of applications and frameworks. However the same level of consideration is not usually afforded to skins and themes, which are often released an never updated again. This can cause usability issues and sometimes even breakages. Of course, people are free to do as they please with their computers.
I do not trust the CEO, the company, or the product. Here are a couple links, I’m certain there are more:
Be aware that Brave is essentially a scam and there are other privacy-focused browsers that might suit your needs.
Luckily Wikipedia articles typically include sources:
https://www.osnews.com/story/24882/the-history-of-app-and-the-demise-of-the-programmer/
This is simply not true.
To add, you could have looked this up before posting a hostile comment on a relative newcomer’s post. This is how linux communities develop reputation of being exclusive & unfriendly.
As a non-sciencey person, can someone explain the chasm of ignorance?
Hold up, let me just make up some numbers real quick to prove how wrong you are!
What a title.
The words that come next will shock you!
Damn, sucks for Canada!
Conflating two concepts can be funny (e.g. puns) but this isn’t that. “Dereferencing a movie ” has no meaning outside of manual memory management.
I understand humour is subjective but some jokes aren’t as strong as others (and some jokes aren’t jokes at all).
I personally don’t find it funny because these types of jokes essentially boil down to “I used a concept outside of its context, and for that reason alone it is funny”. However, with a lot of these jokes the context is so narrow (i.e. programming) that they are almost universally not understood by wider audiences.
Being openly gay is not a political statement.
What article? lol
What does that mean, practically?
You, in fact, cannot install Windows 10 on a Pentium 4.
Leaving this long-term review of a Framework 16 for others to draw conclusions from: https://www.theverge.com/24047424/framework-laptop-16-review