Sonotsugipaa

joined 2 years ago
[–] Sonotsugipaa 17 points 1 year ago (6 children)

Contribute with UX changes? To GNOME maintained software?

[–] Sonotsugipaa 18 points 1 year ago (10 children)

The GTK file chooser is probably the worst AND most inconsistent example of UX that I've ever seen

[–] Sonotsugipaa 11 points 1 year ago

y̶͖̩̍͘̚o̷̠̹̔ủ̸̪̐ͅr̴̙̈́̑̊ ̶͜͝ẁ̷̹o̸̮̙̔͝r̴̫̙̀k̷̳͊ ̶̬͒̂ȉ̸̤s̷̗̀ ̸̰̀̓i̵̹̝̒̂n̴̠͎̲̔v̷͔̅͑a̵̝͐̈́̎l̵͎̈́̕ǘ̶̦͜á̷͉̣͔b̷̧̏͝ḽ̸̎̀e̵͜͠ ̶͉̇t̴̪̟̟̆̋o̷̼͐͋ ̶̲͔̣̀̌̎t̷̰̃̀h̶̛͐͜ẻ̷͕̥ ̸̗͉̇̚c̸̖͎̒̍ȍ̸̡̥̝̂m̷̠̏͂̚p̷̙̀͂͝ã̷͔́n̴͇̥̼͐͗̐y̴̻̭̾

[–] Sonotsugipaa 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Just wait until you hear about declension

[–] Sonotsugipaa 5 points 2 years ago

Some do, unfortunately getting mad about them is sometimes all they can do in some cases (e.g. the OP)

[–] Sonotsugipaa 4 points 2 years ago (2 children)

They probably downvoted because sometimes your job or education strictly requires Linux-incompatible software, and you can't do anything about it;

but then again, 9 out of 10 of those people spare absolutely no effort to move their eggs out of the metaphorical Windows basket.

[–] Sonotsugipaa 52 points 2 years ago

Or that Europe-America Internet traffic goes through a transoceanic link

[–] Sonotsugipaa 11 points 2 years ago

do what they say

[–] Sonotsugipaa 21 points 2 years ago
[–] Sonotsugipaa 33 points 2 years ago (1 children)

It's not the case with this meme, but in C++ template definitions have to be defined in the headers if they're not full template specializations

[–] Sonotsugipaa 3 points 2 years ago

I would rather say that Christianity is open source, but it's distributed with the MIT license and every relevant implementation is closed source and plants DRM software all over the system

[–] Sonotsugipaa 5 points 2 years ago

Disabling swap does not prevent disk I/O from becoming a problem under memory contention, it simply shifts the disk I/O thrashing from anonymous pages to file pages

While the rest of that post matches my understanding of swap (I still think 1GB is next to useless in this case), that summarized point perplexes me.

What non-special file(s) does the kernel write to and read from, and how does it know how much space to use?

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