I use vi as the command line editor, so fetching history commands is quick:
ESC /searchstring
But if it's something really frequent or may benefit from parameters, I usually throw a perl or bash script in /usr/local/bin.
I use vi as the command line editor, so fetching history commands is quick:
ESC /searchstring
But if it's something really frequent or may benefit from parameters, I usually throw a perl or bash script in /usr/local/bin.
I left slashdot for reddit, and reddit for lemmy. Those were replacements from my point of view.
I'm not sure what you mean with "replace" in general. Taking over their servers and replacing the actual running software? Or maybe using their domain name for a lemmy instance? Transfer all logins and data to a lemmy instance and delete them from their systems?
Those are unlikely.
Becoming mainstream, having more media attention and influence than reddit? Then becoming more interesting for spammers and infested with lower quality content? Hopefully not.
I appreciate your concern, but it's been 3 months, and it's still holding a good charge.
I suspect it was a single event where it overheated and gassed. I kept using the phone for weeks thinking my phone case had deformed (I didn't notice the small bulge, but the case's power button wasn't aligning well with the phone), before I realized it was the battery.
When it dies, I'll get a new phone. If I still have both hands.
Well you only live twice :-)
I suppose so, and I'm also thinking about additional gasses damaging the phone.
So far so good, it's been 3 months already.
I use my phones until the battery life is too degraded to be practical and the phone is too damaged to have the batt6replaced. My Samsung A71 is about 3 years old. Some months ago I noticed the battery was pillowing. Since it was still holding charge for more than a day, the guy at a repair shop (where I took it to get a new battery) just punched a pinprick to deflate it, and it's still going strong.
A rudimentary analog type of Pong, assembled from a PCB that came with an electronics magazine and parts from the local equivalent of RadioShack. The controllers were potentiometers mounted on plastic salt shakers, the display was a crt b&w tv.
I was 11, it was my first contact with electronics, coached by one of my mother's former student who was visiting - he was from Japan, my mother was a highschool teacher and taught him Portuguese (I'm Brazilian) after classes, for which he was grateful.
That kickstarted my interest in electronics and tech, which defined my whole career. Thanks Kenji, wherever you are!
Open source AI models?
O never did distro hopping, so I know just a few ones:
Ancient RedHat, because the first servers I've setup were RH 4.2
Debian because after RH stabbed us all in the back for the first time after v.8, that's what I started using for servers
SUSE (SLES), because that's what I use with HANA DB installations
Kubuntu, as it was the easier to install and less traumatic when my wife started using our desktop, coming from windows 95, 20+ years ago
I know there are pros and cons in any distro. Don't waste much time distro hopping. Pick any of the mainstream ones. Install it as your "home base", then if you want to try others, use live usb images.
Between the maintream ones, it's a lot about personal preference. I like kubuntu, because I prefer deb over rpm for packages, and coming from windows, kde is less "alien" to get used to.
I don't know. Can I?