I’m loving my Galaxy Tab 9 Ultra. It’s sturdy, can go in the shower (I don’t normally but I wanted to test it), has great multi-window features, has Dex which is also sometimes useful, is snappy, and I can basically sideload whatever I want.
I’m loving my Galaxy Tab 9 Ultra. It’s sturdy, can go in the shower (I don’t normally but I wanted to test it), has great multi-window features, has Dex which is also sometimes useful, is snappy, and I can basically sideload whatever I want.
I have a 2TB SSD and a 1TB SSD. My Windows VM is allocated 100GB, so it really isn’t bad at all. I use VirtualBox and it starts up basically instantly.
I just realized I have an oldish laptop with Windows on it though so I’m thinking maybe I should just remote into that instead…derp
For Visual Studio Enterprise, Adobe PDF editing, native Office apps, SSMS, and RDP thin clients, I use a Windows VM.
Seconding Molly, based on Signal’s (lack of response), they seem to have zero plans to ever add Android tablet linking. Much to my own dismay.
I’m a recent Molly convert and so far so good. I really hope they don’t shut it down or block it somehow. For how much I love Signal, I don’t understand why they won’t focus on much needed additions that Molly implemented.
Absolutely.
But, no, however the sentiment makes sense and as I am trying to disperse / decentralize most everything I can these days, including getting away from Google services, for example, this does make sense as well.
Got it. Damn. I just switched some services to CloudFlare DNS today…now I guess I’ll change them back.
Yeah, sorta. Nobody would provide internet to where I live, so I finally convinced a company to trench fiber to my house for me.
Unfortunately I’m paying $500/mo for like 96 months now so they can offset the cost.
Worth it though. My alternative was 512kbps DSL that would have outages daily and I’m a remote software engineer. It just didn’t work.
That’s awesome!
I had a similar but not really experience with one of my businesses where they messed up and I basically got business gigabit and four TVs and sports for something ridiculously low (business wise) of like $120/mo.
I later needed to add a TV and the rep put me on hold and then came back and said something to the effect of, “Here’s the deal… apparently we messed up your contract so your current price is locked in for 2 years. If you add this, we have to redo it, and it will go up to $450/mo. I would suggest you don’t add a TV.”
So I didn’t. I bought a $12 adapter off Amazon and just split the cable line instead.
Rural Oregon. 1gbps up and down. $600/month. I never go below ~930mbps each way.
Wait, why do people like to dump on CloudFlare? I must be out of the loop.
Total points comes back from an endpoint, so if you hit that endpoint it tallies it for you.
I have no fix to offer, but in googling around it seems like you’re not alone…unfortunately, I also didn’t find any solution. Kind of weird to see posts about this going back two years but not finding a good fix…
Also depends on where you live. I can charge my Model S from 0% to 100% for about $5-$6 and get 350-400 miles.
But my friend in California would have to pay something like ~$40, which makes it a much harder sell.
Could you explain more? Almost everywhere I’ve worked from Fortune 250 on down has used stored procedures with applications and it seems extremely clean and performance-oriented.
If anything, it separates code from the data more as far as I can tell, so maybe I’m missing something?
Also, if something is somewhat data driven and there’s a bug, you simply alter a procedure versus doing a build and deploy of the entire application.
I’ve found it on Amazon periodically, but to avoid that, they show up at a local Asian supermarket sometimes.
They’re hot as fuck to me though (I’m kinda a spicy wuss though), like, painful to finish…but tasty. My friend can eat them and barely break a sweat or get flush. YMMV.