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I mostly notice it in the feed, not sure about other places. I’ve just give back to jerboa from Voyager now that I have a new enough phone to use jerboa again.
I mostly notice it in the feed, not sure about other places. I’ve just give back to jerboa from Voyager now that I have a new enough phone to use jerboa again.
Yes, remove the thumbnail and expand the text into that space. Sorry for the confusion.
The options I see there are card, small card, and list. All of these show the thumbnail. This is in 0.0.65 currently on f-droid. Is that not expected?
It’s nice as a dimmable bedside night light. I also used the Anduril flickery candle mode at a birthday event recently.
Did you just discover this? It’s a Microsoft site after all.
This was basically Blondies Pizza back in the day. Also the nitter thread is from 2019.
I’d say run a local imap server rather than dealing with the weirdness of storage shares across multiple OS’s.
If we told just anyone, it wouldn’t be private!!!
Srsly any phone app is inherently insecure because the phone itself is insecure. And there’s lots of metadata leakage, like the phone broadcasting its location. There is no “go to app”. It all depends on what you are trying to do and who you are trying to communicate with.
The OEM ones were something like $8 for a 3-pack many years back. Seemed high but they last a while.
There are tons of them on ebay. There are a few different types, depending on your thinkpad model. I suspect the T480 uses the square post style like older T series thinkpads, but I don’t know. Basically, look carefully at the pics to make sure you get the right kind.
If you want OEM ones, try lenovo.com, but they will cost more.
If this is for live disks or mirrors (not backup), LUKS is reasonable. Backup is different from mirroring since one of the things it protects you from is accidentally deleting files. If you delete a file from your main drive, it also disappears from the mirror drive, so mirrors are not backup. For encrypted backup, I’ve been using Borg backup which is quite well thought out, though confusing at first. The backups go on a remote server which is ok since they are all encrypted.
This looks interesting. They put electrodes on the brains of 29 neurosurgery patients and measured neuron signals while playing “Another Brick In The Wall”. They were able to reconstruct the auditory signals from neuron measurements.
You mean the blog link? That’s an awful lot of articles. Is there a single sentence somewhere saying what it is?
What is the project anyway? It’s not obvious at all.
I think the C++11 edition (whichever it was) of Stroustrup’s book TC++PL suggested using C++11 immediately. That is what I would have suggested. I used C++ by necessity in a few projects before that, but I didn’t start actually somewhat liking it until C++11. Everything before that was ugly legacy code.
They want to obsolete all our phones again? No thanks.
When C++11 came out, there was an immediate feeling that the language had received a major overhaul and the best ways to do most things had completely changed. Everything from before that was legacy code, though a lot of it was around. I expect it is still mostly like that.
Or do you mean about Rust? Yes that is new. I still don’t understand the attraction of Rust over Ada that well.
It is perfectly ok to start with C++14, in fact probably preferable to starting with anything before C++11. The idioms changed a lot in C++11. I think changes since then have been minor and incremental by comparison.
Simplest is use /etc/hosts to set up names, if there are just a few.