I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as qaz@lemmy.ml until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in systemd/Linux, FOSS, and Selfhosting.
- 3 Posts
- 11 Comments
qaz@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Discover Hidden Gems: Open-Source Software You Should Know AboutEnglish0·10 hours agoLast time I tried it, it caused high CPU usage, has this been fixed since?
qaz@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Discover Hidden Gems: Open-Source Software You Should Know AboutEnglish0·10 hours agoIt also works really well for routing on water. One feature I really like is being able to specify the dimensions of your boat and then having it take that into account when calculating a route.
qaz@lemmy.worldto Comic Strips@lemmy.world•Cutting Out the Middleman (by Jen Sorensen)English0·1 day agoI’m going to take a risk and say you write faster than you type and reaching for a pencil is quicker than launching a program.
Maybe for you, but opening KWrite takes only 5-6 key presses and I type much faster than I write
qaz@lemmy.worldto Comic Strips@lemmy.world•Cutting Out the Middleman (by Jen Sorensen)English0·1 day agoWe don’t need to go back to handwritten mail, FOSS is the way to go.
I’ve used it and Sololearn back when I first started to learn programming (about 7-9 years ago) and I remember it being fine. However, I used it on a tablet and it has been almost a decade ago so there’s a good chance my opinion doesn’t hold weight anymore.
I saw a new educational tool by JetBrains some time ago and maybe that’s something you could take a look at https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/product-educational-tools.html
It just flickers for a very short amount of time on Jerboa
I made a tool for this some time ago. It detects when programs write to your home directory outside the XDG spec and logs the file and the location of the binary that wrote it to an SQLite file.
qaz@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which Kubernetes is the Smallest? Examining Talos Linux, K3s, K0s, and More - Sidero LabsEnglish0·25 days agoAnd obviously their option is the “best”. From the conclusion:
Talos Linux is unique. It’s the only option that includes OS management in a purpose-built distribution for running Kubernetes. There’s no compromise for scaling up or down. In terms of small-scale numbers, it “wins” in several of the examined categories, including memory usage, disk r/w, and installation size. But all of these metrics are side effects of Talos Linux’s defining characteristic: It’s simple.
qaz@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I just bought a Pixel 8a and I'm planning to install GrapheneOS on it. Are there any other recommendations?0·1 year agoThis seems really inconvinient, especially because the app page already shows the anti-features.
Anti features are also often not comparable, but they are presented that way. Relying on some random proprietary API owned by some random company is not the same as using Wikipedia or OSM.
App Link