Looks like there is a recent port on steam.
Software developer and self-hosting enthusiast
Looks like there is a recent port on steam.
Three seashells?
Search Engine is a great podcast and that was a great interview. For me it didn’t really answer the question though, but I guess the answer is very individual.
/end of thread
As we used to say.
Likely a lot of time was spent iterating and experimenting with different ideas, testing out concepts, tweaking, etc. Haven’t played the game but I do work as a software developer.
Carmack actually developed Doom on NeXTSTEP, not Linux. The windows and DOS ports were not released as open source, due to copyright issues concerning the sound library. So they released the source of the Linux port instead. I don’t think it made much of a difference in practice since it was a fairly popular game even before that.
Sådan synes jeg egentligt altid det har været. Jeg har altid undret mig over, at de åbenbart ikke har en simpel stavekontrol…
I’m still on the Sony XM4. No reason to upgrade really.
Search Engine had been my favorite podcast in the last year or so.
It most definitely is. Look up Olle Nilsson on YouTube to see what a professional photographer can do with an Xperia camera (Xperia 5 V).
I still love my Xperia 5 II. I plan on keeping it for a least a couple more years.
Dark Reader, LibRedirect, ublock origin
Fedt mand, skriv gerne mere om hvordan du lagde sag an, hvis muligt.
I have to agree. It’s simply not worth the risk.
Fun fact: Zachary Quinto had a hard time doing it so they had to use super glue in some of the scenes
I never new The Three Investigators were continued later. I remember reading those in Danish as a child.
Best coverage I’ve seen so far has been on Ars Technica.
Another vote for Debian stable with backports and flatpaks. I don’t really have an issue with outdated software, and I really like “apt”, maybe because I’m so used to it as this point. I’ve been running mainly Debian for 12+ years now.
My second choice for personal use would be Arch Linux. I had very good experience with it back in the day and their wiki is fantastic. But I’m too comfortable with the simplicity and stability of Debian at this point.
At work I use Ubuntu because everyone else uses it. It’s not too bad. I just ignore all the crap I don’t like (like snaps).
Was about to ask the same
Yes, you should have backups. You can use something like KeePass to store them I suppose. I personally just use the file system on a secure server.