Not a direct answer I'm afraid but I use Tree Style Tabs. You can group tabs (in a subtree), move them to other windows (drag and drop), close them together, ... It's helped me a lot keep my browser tabs tidy and grouped up by relevance.
I don't think you'll be able to achieve that with systemd paths, I'm afraid. It's not a use-case it is designed for.
It's hard to come up with a suggestion without knowing more about the depth of the directory and the number of nodes in each level. But you could try updating a dummy file such as latest_timestamp
in the top-level directory (which a systemd path can monitor BTW) and let the service unit be triggered by that.
It doesn't look to be a decline at all (quite healthy on the contrary) until around the time ChatGPT was released.
I'm definitely interested to take a look at the code. Any other URL you could share that wouldn't require logging in?
People like me, who actually learned GIMP before PS, obviously didn’t go in with the same bias and therefore have a much better grasp on it.
Speaking for myself, I can say that's true. To the point that even if I've got access to both, my default would be GIMP.
I had no idea you could do that via about:config
😅 I would always either disable "Use the selected profile ..." or launch it with firefox -P --no-remote
as suggested.
FYI after years of having several profiles for different activities, I settled down on Multi-account containers and have been quite happy with it. I even wrote a little blogpost about my experience sometime ago - you might find it useful.
A bit over elaborating some obvious points but nonetheless a good read on how to interpret ClientRead
s.
Monitoring databases and their performance used to be quite an intense and complicated effort. Luckily nowadays it's just intense when you export the metrics to Prometheus and have nice dashboards in Grafana.
Keep sharing such insightful links please!
dired
inside emacsclient -t
😁
Been there! Once I lost ~120 points in one sitting 🤦 I was bored and was playing without being really engaged in the game - something that used to happen frequently. I stopped that behaviour and since then been only playing only when I feel my brain is ready, rather than playing every day or week. It's been working quite well for me.
lambda calculus
I wouldn't say so. I'd say you can try quickly skimming through the theoretical explanation and instead reading the code snippets provided. I've got a feeling that you're already familiar with the concept and can figure out the code - it's just the math behind it which can read too intense.
It's insane. We spend almost 4x the amount we used to back in 2019 for our weekly groceries (nothing fancy, just Freshco and Walmart) and I, honestly, can say the quality of our material life has dropped noticeably.
Oh and don't get me started on the rent!
\o/