it means that you have to manually reposition every single window, every single time. for any and all apps, by design
it means that you have to manually reposition every single window, every single time. for any and all apps, by design
note: on most computers, it worked the opposite to how one would think. Turning it on slowed your cpu to around 33 MHz
more like "move glacially and declare things as "will not support’ so technically we had nothing TO fix!"
it’s when devs of a graphics stack just suddenly feel the need to protect your own computer from itself, so they say fuck you to any features that they deem “insecure”, including accessibility features (they will claim they fixed this, but it’s opt-in per app. old apps will just be completely unusable for some people with special needs.)
But they eliminated tearing on the desktop! woo!!!
followed by “worcestershire sauce”
change one pixel and suddenly it doesn’tmatch. Do the comparison based on similarity instead and now you’re back to false positives
if i park in the shade, and therefore don’t have to turn on the ac as soon as I get in, I think that would be about the same, savings wise.
iiuc he contracted a reputable company to build it for him
control-z, kill %1
you mean it doesn’t work when the device is turned off? weird! /s
sometimes, a script needs to be edited in a plain text editor, without having access to an lsp or any other dev tools.
yes, but you don’t set it from your phone.
no, you can’t
so you can set alarms on you phone. And have the vibrator vibrate on time. duh!
that’s not how asymptotes work.
but they have a lot more disadvantages for most scenarios (if you’re not a faang scale company, you probably don’t need them)
by issues I mean breaking existing users’ workflow, possibly literally locking them out (I personally use a yubikey with my keepass db, for example).
There is a very simple solution he could have done: not rename the existing package. Just give his fork a new name. That’s it, everybody is happy.
So yes, he is the one causing issues. Because the issue isn’t in the features he removed, but by breaking the users’expectation that the package they installed yesterday, is the same one they’re updating today.
it’s all the same web 2.0 bullshit, but for anything with crypto in its name
this has “draw the rest of the fucking owl” vibes to it. especially step 3
it’s opt-in, per app. Meaning unless old apps are patched and recompiled, they will be inaccessible.