I assume it was just named after r/politics - like most of the other communities here during the migration.
I assume it was just named after r/politics - like most of the other communities here during the migration.
On a large enough clock, the hour hand could have easily visible marks for not just minutes, but also seconds. If I were an architect or whatever I would try to make that the floor of a lobby or something.
Yeah, This case especially since it includes XWayland
But it is more difficult - by definition, anyone can just fork what you are selling and sell it themselves cheaper or free. Of course there is value in customer service, maintenance, hosting, etc. and those can be sold, but the actual code is tougher. Some projects bypass it by having proprietary add-ons or versions, since the open part itself is hard to monetize.
“I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure.”
(I thought it was Mark Twain before I looked it up for the wording)
I also read the announcement (and FAQ, and other pages) but was still hoping someone would comment on what it is exactly.
(I did guess along the right lines at least, but wasn’t really sure)
I don’t see evidence in the article that it even is ‘their software’ being discussed here - just a framework they are suggesting for compositors to have new functionality (regardless of GPU brands).
It even says “They aren’t going into this alone but at this year’s DisplayNext Hackfest it was also backed up by AMD for going a similar route.”
… Is that the Smith Tower?
(To see it on Android I shared the link, and from the share dialog I could open it in ImgurViewer)
I think that would only be likely to work on the original image with full metadata. Once imgur or whatever has processed it that would be gone I assume.
I guess I’ll be the one to ask. Since we are on Lemmy…
Linux support?
Depends on how common songs about pancakes and bacon are.
We do, but OP wants the correct answer.
Seems you didn’t read the description. The executable that produced that output was 4 kilobytes in size.
If you don’t mind gacha games, I’ve been enjoying Honkai: Star Rail. The battles are turn based, some of the puzzles and events are a bit reaction time dependent, but not difficult generally.
And indeed 1F414 is a lower (hexadecimal) number than 1F95A, so in the absence of other criteria I’m sure in most systems it would sort first.
They might not know the name for the extension of alphabetical order to all characters in Unicode (and neither do I) but it’s logical to associate it with alphabetical since it’s similar in concept.
I really didn’t want to let it win.
I also had that experience with emacs, which has a built in help system. I couldn’t find a topic on ‘exit’ or ‘quit’ and refused to just search online.
Took me half an hour.
Last night when I saw this post I happened to support it at a perfect round number.
To have a chance of being made into a real set, it needs a little under 5 times that number of supporters - specifically this weird composite number 2^4 * 5^4.
My immediate reaction before opening the link: “No.”
Yet I somehow got 96.6% twice.
Visually, I certainly wouldn’t call them 3.4% away from perfect. I’m guessing there’s some allowance for imperfection even at 100%.