No there aren’t just disable it from tarallo_settings!
No there aren’t just disable it from tarallo_settings!
I’ve always thought estimates were a problem in programming, but now that we have switched to agile with sprints its almost comical, they hurt development in so many ways… People start to give all the value to time and completed tasks, and 0 value to what they’re actually doing.
In one of my jobs, they were automatically locking any push 2 hours before the shift ended.
I’ll give a different perspective on what you said: dx12 basically moved half of the complexity that would normally be managed by a driver, to the game / engine dev, which already have too much stuff to do: making the game. The idea is that “the game dev knows best how to optimize for its specific usage” but in reality the game dev have no time to deal with hardware complexity and this is the result.
I only tried this with windows which works fine: on restore Clonezilla has an option to rescale partitions on the fly to fit the destination drive. For drivers, windows detect changes and update them the first time is started on the physical machine.
Clonezilla. I usually prepare images in virtual machines and restore them on physical drives.
I think the article is partially true but overly dramatic… “immaginary problems” are usually just overkill solutions to actual issues, and are a nice way to balance out the stress of working on bugs 24/7, which is not feasible anyway
Wait, do you mean that your ff account share data with pocket, whether you ever signed into it or not?
If communities belonged to “lemmy” you would have Reddit. If anything would be forcefully federated it would be a mess. IMHO it’s the right balance. I get your concerns about being confusing but given the state of development of the platform most of it will be solved by a better UI and better instance data synchronization policies, etc…
I didn’t get the part on Firefox too much: isn’t pocket just a way to serve (non user tailored) ads? As long as they don’t sell your data and its not invasive it should be fine…they have to sustain themselves is some way
I mean, it’s a scientific job, you have to prove your arguments… with that said they should help you to do so, if you feel them as arrogant, they are bad at their job…and since programming is a complex job, there are a lot of not so good people
From the image seems like the pins broke off from the usb and are left on the board? If you have some soldering skill you can try to replace usb
Which bridge do you use? do you self-host it?