Online json parser. Throw in some data and then structure a query.
It’ll keep updating the results as you tweak your query. A simple search will probably give you twenty that’ll work. I can’t remember what i normally use off the top of my head.
Online json parser. Throw in some data and then structure a query.
It’ll keep updating the results as you tweak your query. A simple search will probably give you twenty that’ll work. I can’t remember what i normally use off the top of my head.
Do you think the devs aren’t “thinking critically” as they’ve made a very cohesive de?
Besides that, people saying “Gnome sucks, it’s garbage” is not a constructive criticism anyhow.
The only dumb take is the one above this comment.
It’s been this way forever. I never see KDE get near the hate from gnome users because it just doesn’t affect them.
When you can pick whatever you like i don’t understand why you’d waste time complaining about any you don’t use.
Yeah I’ve been following that. It seemed at the time the project didn’t implement nearly all the specs as dendrite which was still lagging synapse.
Might take another look though. I really did want to use it since it was written in rust. Seemed it should probably be more performant, everything else being equal.
Apparently dendrite is just on maintenance due to insufficient funds. It was what i set up on a test instance because it is lighter, etc. Go figure.
Honestly no. Haven’t found the need.
God no.
This is honestly a very big upgrade. Really looking forward to all these changes.
One of the more interesting things I’ve read here. Very nice work. So long as it is free of vulnerabilities (with your small codebase, seems it should be) then this seems like a great addition. Hoping for widespread adoption.
Sometimes. Depends what you’re backing up to. In some cases it would work in tandem with rclone.
I really like its architecture. The efficiency is really nice when pushing to the cloud and not making so many transactions.
First one sets it so that only the owner can read, (4), write (2), execute (1). That’s why it equals 7. The group and all others (the next two numbers) can do nothing (0 meaning they can’t read, write, or execute anything in there).
The second sets ownership (ie. That adelie account will be both the user and group in the above scenario.)
I’m coming in late in this but i don’t know why you’d really do the first. The second simply changes things so your user has permission to their own home directory.
Lastly, names are meaningless in general. Things work on ids. You can run id
to get a quick look at who you are. Same with echo $UID
or $GID.
Really long but useful article to wrap your head around permissions- https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/linux-file-permissions-explained
I’ve been running fedora with updates since 29 without issue. I don’t know what people are doing that they break removed constantly. Maybe I’m just old and don’t do extreme enough on my desktop.
Honestly didn’t even know they migrated to toml. I upgraded and it said yaml wasnt supported anymore. I used alacritty migrate
and only had to remove a couple deprecated options and it was fine.
It’s why I keep it. It’s set and just seems to work well.
Oh never mind. I’m thinking per adapter, not per connection. You’re right.
Do any modern OS’s set DNS system wide?
I don’t disagree there should be an option because I see maybe why they wouldn’t do that.
I don’t know how helpful that is. Who really gives a removed if it’s a .com or .org?
In the date example that is pretty relevant- I don’t see how it’s super relevant here. It’s necessary of course but not very important for a user. Can you imagine using auto complete having to specify com.BBC or com.espn?
In any case, having it user facing instead of a simple “Firefox” style name seems dumb anyway. It’s fine for just development.
Then just use windows dude. Jfc
The flatpak works well for me. Always ends up using too much RAM but the latest versions seem to be better about it now.
https://release.gnome.org/45/developers/index.html
Link to that is here for anyone else who didn’t initially see it.
As someone who was around for the sysvinit to systemdd change, I’ll take the latter every single day and twice on Sunday.
Terrible topic but systemd itself is a godsend IMO, warts and all.