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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)D
Posts
8
Comments
318
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I honestly preferred Kdenlive over Davinci Resolve, I had too many problems with it (although tbf, I am running Linux, so…)

  • I honestly preferred Kdenlive over Davinci Resolve, I had too many problems with it (although tbf, I am running Linux, so…)

  • Tried it. Personally, didn’t really work for me. Blender is great 3D software, but video editing is not its forte. (And that’s fine! Do one thing and do it well.)

  • Kdenlive is also a really cool video editor. I use it occasionally. You don’t see many professionals using it but honestly it can do a lot more than what most people give it credit for.

  • Which page?

  • Personally prefer :xprobably because it’s a little more ergonomic, as Z is all the way in the corner (QWERTY), and is the same key twice, while : and x are in two different spots, and can therefore be hit faster.

    I know, it’s like millisecond differences, but, hey, I’m a vim user.

  • I guess he’s interpreting it as “oneth”, in which are “You” would be the first element.

    I like that, so I’ll believe it.

  • I’m assuming she’d know the year…?

  • The Voyager post says “0 comments”, but there’s a comment clearly visible at the bottom(of the voyager screenshot).

    /s

  • I have an exercise joke, but it doesn’t really work out.

  • laughs harder in nushell

  • NixOS isn’t a tank, it’s a tank building machine!

  • I don’t tend to recommend Ubuntu anymore: mainly because of snaps.

    I had a weird start with Linux, using it on my Pi and then eventually just installing NixOS as my first distro. A weird first choice, but honestly it makes even advanced tasks trivial(I can switch my WM/DE in one line!)

  • I think OP(original commenter?) mentioned they tried Nobara, but it wouldn’t even boot.

    My consistent recommendation to Linux newcomers is PopOS, it’s a simple, great distros that can be powerful when needed.

    (I myself use Nix btw)

  • Recursive Mono. It’s freaking cool. I like ligatures so it’s got them, it’s nice on the eyes, and it’s playful without being too playful.

    Bonus points if you use Semicasual.

  • IIRC, should be Cascadia Code.

    Also, I’m the opposite. I love ligatures, I feel they make my code cleaner and remove extra noise.

  • Second this. System76 themselves sell multiple machines with Nvidia cards, so they have at least some incentive to make it work.

    I see Fedora recommended quite a bit, but setting it up on my younger family member’s laptop was bot exactly simple, and setting up his game library proved near impossible.

    PopOS just worked. I try not to be too pushy about Linux, but as someone who was pushed into (and now loves) using Linux, I’d suggest giving it one more shot. (I still dual-boot: keep a small Windows partition for the occasional need).

  • Truly! One day I decided to take the plunge and learn functional programming with Haskell—I haven’t been the same since.

  • Functional languages aren’t for everyone.

    I dabbled in Haskell, and my time with it was very enjoyable. I grew comfortable with the syntax over time, so I’d say try the language for a few days/weeks (really depends how fast you learn) and see how it makes you feel.

    I definitely suggest trying out Haskell. I followed the Wikibooks guide, and ever since using Haskell, I haven’t been coding the same. Functional programming can be amazing.

    I’ve never heard of Unision. A quick look at it and it seems interesting, but very foreign. I’ll try it out and give it my thoughts.