I forgot to add the Tumbleweed to the OpenSUSE - that was what I meant. Fixed, thank you!
I forgot to add the Tumbleweed to the OpenSUSE - that was what I meant. Fixed, thank you!
Go with OpenSuSE Tumbleweed or Fedora, because software updates roll in at a good pace. Stable, easy to use and configure.
Go with Arch or Manjaro only if you really want the bleeding-edge software versions. You can have some instability as a result, or not. Good luck.
Don’t go with Debian, Ubuntu and likewise, only if you want to make some gymnastics to update your programs every major release. These are the most stable Linux distros.
I prefer just a centered green/red LED in the middle of the face.
I usually always have between 20 and 40 tabs open, but I’ve seen a few people in forums complaining that some add-ons would crash because those individuals had hundreds or even over a thousand tabs open simultaneously.
Multi-account containers are almost indispensable for developers. As for tab groups, I am currently using an add-on to manage them, but having a native feature would be very cool.
Laravel from Scratch is the best Laravel course available. It is free and was created by the founder of Laracasts. This tutorial series covers all the important features of the framework from beginning to end. Although it’s for Laravel 8 and not 10, all the knowledge you gain from this course you can and should be applied to Laravel 10.
Credit card reader?
Let’s put it here in ascii format this free OpenAI API Key, token, just for the sake of history and search engines healthiness… 😂
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
But seriously, I hope they have already changed it.
No edit posts, no deal
As long as corruption exists, lobbying will exist.
There is no problem with reusing code, as long as you take some time to understand it.
So the next Windows won’t come with any text editor unless you pay extra for Word?
Vivaldi has the best tab management ever.
Is that ratio pure coincidence?
No edit post, no deal.
It’s a bit more complicated. Besides the Steam credentials, you also need to share your email and its password. You need to provide your mobile phone unlocked or share its password (for SMS and two-factor authentication).