Though, not the same thing. I really like the Dutch implementation for their old maps: https://topotijdreis.nl
Though, not the same thing. I really like the Dutch implementation for their old maps: https://topotijdreis.nl
Another Many-to-many example within this usecase would be “subscriptions”. Users can subscribe to multiple channels and channels can have multiple users subscribed to them. You would use another relational table that stores the channel_id & user_id, with uniqueness for both together, since “being subscribed to one specific channel multiple times” doesn’t make sense and perhaps put a column to store “hitting the bell” in there too.
This is a pretty interesting counter example: https://www.eteknix.com/running-yuzu-on-switch-gives-you-better-performance-than-native-gaming/
But, as others have said, exceptions confirm the rule.
This isn’t a desktop app, but the editor seems quite solid: GrapesJS
You can cancel when receiving the first reminder, or probably also immediately. Good initiative though, I might do the same.
At college some guys were self hosting a git server for a project but it went down. We resorted to a USB stick that acted as remote
and was passed around. That was awesome to see, for about a day…
Thought it was a good opportunity to potentionally learn something new. Seems to have worked out.
I’d change
Except it’s barely in your hands because your surroundings have vastly more influence over what you actually become.
What a metaphor.
My neighbour is. I hear the boot sound about once a week. No idea what he’s using it for, but I hope it’s not connected to his network.
I definitely did not run into this many issues when I installed it… Just kinda worked for me, so I’m not sure where you should investigate
Good to mention that (in the Netherlands) when you’ve provided fingerprints for a new identification card, the fingerprints are wiped from any system after you’ve received the card, remaining only on the card itself.
Oh interesting & unfortunate. I can confirm I use one display, running it on my TV. I must say, big picture on my desktop session gets closer to the experience than when I initially set this up. I hope they add the quick settings overlay to the normal big picture mode some time. I might switch back to running on my desktop session.
I haven’t had the issue with the menu, never had as far as I remember. It might be because of the way you set up the session. If you try installing the aur package I linked and start that session, the menu hopefully just works as it did for me.
I’m using this package: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/gamescope-session-steam-git Looking at the source here: https://github.com/ChimeraOS/gamescope-session-steam/blob/main/usr/bin/steamos-session-select
You can see it looks for a script to shutdown steam or defaults to normal shutdown.
I pointed os-session-select
to a script that restarts my sddm service, before shutting down steam, so it returns me into the default session. It was a bit finicky though and I hacked a systemd service into it to ensure the script didn’t get killed.
Hope this helps. Might clean it up some time and put it in a repository/on the aur.
EDIT: I was inspired by ChimeraOS; it uses that os-session-select
for its main project as well to return to the gnome desktop.
I’d say a battery is at least something that should be “chargeable”, either one time or rechargeable. I dont think you can use solar cells to store energy back into the sun.
Not saying that my definition does work for the dirt fuel cell, talked about in the article, though.
Lemmy
First! And I actually did quite poor…
It seems like ChatGPT can write, but from what I’ve understood about the technology it always sounded more like it was taught to “speak”. Not with sounds obviously, but the sentences are build without necessarily knowing all characters that make it up, like children do with speech before learning to write.
I’m not a researcher on the topic, so I could’ve interpreted something wrong. I’d like to see Cunningham’s law proven right, if I did!
I thought this was a pretty good in-depth explanation of the infinite case and the finite case: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTsRGQj6VT4
It’s been a while since I’ve watched it myself, but remember them going into the ownership structure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNZy603as5w
There’s basically no way for them to not make it a subscription model.