According to Varoufakis, Europe missed the bus on cloud capital (=big cloud platforms like amazon, meta, twitter,…) and the race is currently playing out between US and China.
According to Varoufakis, Europe missed the bus on cloud capital (=big cloud platforms like amazon, meta, twitter,…) and the race is currently playing out between US and China.
Haven’t seen your laptop, but if it’s anything like mine it’s a very lousy boat.
That actually makes a lot of sense. I never even second guessed how tedious all the parsing is. But then, as others have said here, as soon as the task at hand reaches a level of complexity beyond grepping, piping and so on I just very naturally move to Python.
On a different note, there are ways to teach bash json. I recall seeing a hacker conference talk on it some time ago, but didn’t pay close attention.
Mh, it probably depends a lot where you’re coming from. I don’t need Powershell or have a reason to learn it in my daily work, and I mostly use WSL to access Linux shells everywhere else. And on top of that, I don’t understand why Powershell needs a completely different command set to basically every other shell. It’s a biased take, but I have not had an interaction with Powershell that I liked, nor have I seen a feature that made me want to look into it more.
What’s the killer feature, would you say? Care giving me the fanboy-pitch?
edit. Oh and I forgot, the tab completion in Powershell is so incredibly dumb. I never ever in my life want to cycle through all items in a path, and much less have it be case insensitive. Come to think of it, this might be the origin of most of my disdain. ;)
WSL has changed the game pretty significantly, don’t you agree? It’s not perfect, but allows me to stay firm in my resolve never to learn powershell.
I’d spend half the money on snail amnesia research. The rest I’d just squander.
Have your parents and siblings changed their everything as well? That’s how I would try to find someone I went to school with.
More like all the research teams.
John Mayer - Walt Grace’s Submarine Test, January 1967 Not a real story, but it might as well be.
I remember the software being very janky, too. But then again, that was Windows 95 days. 😅
Monkey island for hours and hours. Man I had a good time with that PC. Thanks for bringing back those memories.
Tape drive! I had one of those back in the mid to late 90s, salvaged from my dad’s dead office PC. I was around 10, and the fact that it worked to take a part from a machine and put it into another, as well as the absolutely insane storage capacity of the tapes… felt like magic. No clue how I knew what to do, either, but it worked.
Edit. Hazy on the specs, but I think it would have been a Pentium 1 (166MHz) with 16MB RAM, and 1.2GB HDD seems about right. Played the heck out of Rayman on that.
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Just been through the fire of having to clone my system to a new SSD and no, startup repair did nothing for me.
Not only did you write all of that, but you made me read all of it, too. Very entertaining!
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I’d like to know, too. I just played a bit of the reverse-engineered demo again (never had the full version as a kid, either) and it’s still a fun game.
Does anybody have pointers how to compile it? The readme is a little lacking…
50% of 3%, that’s a whopping 1.5%! 😅
But jokes aside, the average Firefox user is probably a lot more likely to have extensions than the average Chrome user.
the password game irl