Isn’t this the whole idea behind flatpak but everyone seems to hate it
Isn’t this the whole idea behind flatpak but everyone seems to hate it
Andy B, - good first name for a tester
“cool”
You’ll probably have to generate a lot of plots, graphs and figures. Choosing the right type of figure to explain the data is an important skill - maybe have a play with some of the examples from https://r-graph-gallery.com/
User: I’ve tried everything
Support: Have you tried <first step in documentation>?
Do not upgrade to Gemini assistant! It literally cannot do any Google home tasks, like set alarms, events, tasks etc.
This is despite it explicitly claiming that it can do most Assistant task (including the ones I mentioned above).
0 Stars.
No, I said A. Blinkin
Bring back personal homepages and webrings!
I remember reading those Dev journals too, but I feel like they helped me to get more out of B&W than most other people.
Yes, it was all about building hype, but it meant that I played more in a “find-your-own-fun-and-set-your-own-goals” way, which I think was what the original intent was.
Everyone’s biggest complaint was that the missions were half-baked and felt like they were thrown in right at the end. And they were right.
Next to Coloradon’t
Keep the batteries at or below 20%
One thing that worked for me in a similar situation was to enforce an “owner” tag or some kind of registry on everything.
Basically, if you set something up, change some configuration, whatever - put your email address on it.
Write a readme.md or wiki or guide too, but at the very minimum put your name down as the owner so that when someone comes along and wants to know if it’s safe to change/upgrade/delete, they can find you and ask. If someone leaves, you can do a quick search and get them to handover/write up anything they were responsible for.
Security Theatre