I still find myself trying to search like that every once in a while :(
I still find myself trying to search like that every once in a while :(
Screw the running water and antibiotics. I don’t need no machinery or amenities, give me cheese!
Computers are cool though
The real paradox is this opinion coming from Twitter
I went from Arch to NixOS and I’ve been loving it. I also had all the time on the world to dive in with several machines to fall back to.
There are a lot of layers to wade through especially when you need a specific tool like your UE5 case. As others are saying, there are ways to make everything work, nix or non-nix, it’s just more to work through after getting the bases covered.
Anecdotally, I had little trouble getting set up on my MSI laptop with an RTX2070, Primus and all. That was after learning the ropes on a Ryzen IdeaPad.
Rambling aside, I would definitely make sure to start in a non-mission-critical way, but do jump right in if you’re comfortable. Maybe if you can stomach the Asus a bit longer, or get the Framework set up and play around with the Asus. And ask plenty of questions! I know I’m not alone in jumping in on nix questions any way I can :)
Isn’t this the/almost the last one, or was that a fever dream I had?
I’m not sure if you mean gearing yourself up for learning or inspiring others to learn, but my answer might be the same for both.
Analogies. They’re primarily how I learn and understand things, as well as how I try to convey things to others. Being able to connect some dots to what you already know, even if they’re vastly different ideas, really helps (me) solidify new information and find a driving force to uncover more.
It could just be my wiring, but I think a lot of how we understand the world is in the terms of our previous understanding. There’s a real possibility of misguided bias though, like knowing all about hammers so everything reminds you of nails.
If you like obsidian, synching works well to at least selfhost your data.
Data in memory will be offloaded to swap space. I doubt we’d notice any fluctuations since we’re part of the simulation, but externally it could slow to a crawl and basically be useless. They might shut it down, hopefully just to refactor. But again we probably wouldn’t notice any downtime, even if it’s permanent.
My first reaction was also to make fun, but it kinda seems neat and it’s different, which I welcome. Really hope there’s plans to support one strip across monitors cause that would be kind of dope to look at.
Edit: also I’ve had a pretty easy time with a 2070 running Wayland once the drivers and wm are right. I did manage to mess up my old nixos generations trying to get started and changing things around lmao. Landed on hyprland, and it’s smooth.
Yeah, from what I’ve read the best approach is a different service for 2fa and/or something involving backups and a physical safe.
The fucking archers
I learned a ton from this, it’s kind of “The Book” I guess. For OP, there’s a pretty massive series of blog posts I fumbled along with too, https://ianthehenry.com/posts/how-to-learn-nix/introduction/ though it’s a couple years old.
All I want is per-site process isolation, dammit
My mind auto harmonized with this comment
Proton on Linux is annoying to say the least. I’ve got it mostly working on my distro and without a DE. Have you checked the protovnpvn_reconnector service, assuming you’re on systemd? It’s kind of odd that it just slows to a crawl but maintains connection.
FlorisBoard has swipe support, but it’s still a new feature and doesn’t work all that well. It also doesn’t have the suggestion bar yet iirc.
Lmao wait what? 🎵It’s no surprise to me, I am my own worst enemy🎵