
I've got to try this. My hand gets fatigued after about 10 minutes of writing with the "regular" grip.
Same. All my life I didn't like being around kids, being in places with lots of children, being with nieces, nephews etc. I found them loud and unpredictable, like belligerent little drunks with attention seeking problems.
But then I got married, and we had kids, and I suddenly don't mind anymore. Probably an evolutionary adaptation. But there are still certain kids I can't tollerate, but that's more likely the parents fault, not the kids fault.
This is a good one. I'm keeping it to use for others, thanks.
These are some rules of mindset I've given to others in the past when trying linux-based operating systems.
- Don't try to apply the same computing and productivity patterns you've learned from Windows. Don't try to force Windows concepts onto Linux OS, you will confuse yourself and get frustrated.
- If something doesn't work the way you expect it to, doesn't mean it's broken.
- Just because something doesn't behave the same as in Windows, doesn't mean it's worse. It's probably designed that way for a good reason.
- If your daily work routine or gaming life revolves around the use programs developed specifically for the Windows platform, you're gonna need to invest time and effort to try to recreate that in Linux. It may not even be possible to fully replicate it. And that's not the fault of Linux, it's not designed to be a drop-in Windows replacement.
- Everyone has their own taste and preferences. Just like some people prefer driving a manual car and some prefer auto. If you try Linux and hate it, that's okay, that doesn't make you bad or wrong, but keep in mind that those who do prefer Linux are not weird or daft or wrong either.
Also the "cheddar" that is normally found in USA is really just another heavily processed American-style cheese with a different color. It's very different than an English cheddar or a vintage cheddar.
That's a cool idea. I'd like to start doing this. I hope my knees can cope, I'm very heavy.
I get the reference!
The majority of dust particles on the surface of your desk is dead human skin cells. That's the part you're missing.
Yes. And their socks are too.
My daughters share school socks, because they are all the same colour and shape. So I guess this concept isn't too unreasonable to do it on a whole family level.
Yeah, I remember reading this last year.
Update, after looking at it a bit more, I don't know if I like the Edge 60 pro. It's got a MediaTek processor, I prefer Qualcomm. I'm not a fan of the faux leather back, and the price is much higher than I expected (though I know they discount substantially after a year on the market).
I did Gentoo from stage 1 too back in the day, it's was a valuable learning experience for me, and those skills helped me to fix things when they went wrong down the track.
Yes. Thank you for speaking the only truth in this thread.
The number 1024 is my favourite, it feels like a smooth slippery ice skating rink, with lots of room for activities.
12 is another good number, it feels like a sharp 12 pointed knife, very good at slicing things up evenly.
This number always feels like a completely full glass, one drop would overflow it.
Prominent open source projects you're involved with or have contributed to.
I'm on an Edge 30 Pro now, it's the best smartphone I've ever used. I've had it for 2 years, and it was 1 year old when I bought it.
I skipped the Edge 40 and Edge 50 (they are pretty good, but not worth upgrading), this Edge 60 pro will likely be my next new phone.
I will wait until I can buy a lightly used one. I don't buy new smartphones anymore. There are many people who upgrade their phone every year, and unlike iPhones, most android smartphones depreciate in value rapidly after they are even lightly used, so it's easy to get a good deal on a 1 year old phone that's in near-new condition.
Bro, people normally don't comment in the form of a regular expression.
I was big into custom ROMs back when CyanogenMod was the state of the art. Unfortunately these days my banking app and my work mail app don't work on custom ROMs, so I'm stuck with whatever the manufacturer provides me.

I need help choosing a .Net Headless CMS for a new project
Firstly, I need to mention I'm coming back to .Net for the first time in more than 10 years. Last time I used .Net was on a very old .Net Framework 4 ASP.NET commercial fast food ordering application in 2013. Since then I've been working with Environmental Scientists, researchers, and academics, using exclusively Python (Django, Flask, FastAPI, etc) for the last 10 years.
This new project I'm tasked with is a custom content publishing platform, so my first thought is obviously a CMS for the content. I feel that Headless CMS products are the go-to these days, and that fits well with our needs because it is the authoring/admin side that the customer is most interested in. The frontend, or "content consumption" side of things is a custom scientific data visualizer we are building in parallel.
My team has been given a MS Azure Cloud subscription to use, and we want to take advantage of as many "cloud-native" approaches as we can. Eg, using Azure Active Directory (AAD) for SSO, using Azur