it comes down to wayland, i3 only supports Xorg, sway only supports wayland.
as far as features goes sway was built to be pretty much a drop in replacement for i3 with a few improvements.
it comes down to wayland, i3 only supports Xorg, sway only supports wayland.
as far as features goes sway was built to be pretty much a drop in replacement for i3 with a few improvements.
long time i3 user, now switched to sway
I think its a nice alternative to developers to offer software that is not available on your package manager, but having a distro offer multiple different ways of installing a package is not a good idea, I’m talking about ubuntu of course, as a user I just want to apt-get update/upgrade
and be sure my system is up to date, snap undermines that because I’m not sure anymore. also I don’t understand why I need to close the app I’m using to update it with snap, if the app is containerized I should be able to install multiple versions without affecting each other.
yup pretty sure
$ cat /etc/passwd
fox:hunter2:1000:1000::/home/fox:/usr/bin/zsh
😉
you don’t need to be root to read /etc/passwd
following a recipe is like executing an algorithm, except there is no segmentation fault. whats not to like.
I mean yeah, the only reason people have to believe elder scrolls 6 is in development is that teaser from 2018, and honesty they probably only made that teaser to temper expectations.
love parallel !, for example encoding a bunch wavs to opus:
parallel --eta 'opusenc --bitrate 256 {} {.}.opus' ::: *.wav
However, the two Jumpsec Red Team members found that they could go around the restriction by changing the internal and external recipient ID in the POST request of a message, thus fooling the system into treating an external user as an internal one.
so they only do the check on client side. classic.
love cat -n
, when working with csv files I often use a command like this to figure out which column I need:
head -n1 file.csv | sed 's/,/\n/g' | cat -n
Its a way to prioritize which posts you are going to read. if there are only 10 posts you can read all of them, if there are 1000 maybe not, depends on how much time you have, but when people can vote on which posts they find interesting there is a good chance you will find the most voted interesting as well.
there is a page about this on the lemmy docs: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/users/05-censorship-resistance.html