I agree with this, but in open source there’s an extra layer of complexity: the “I don’t care about market share” dev attitude that’s sometimes admirable and sometimes frustrating.
I agree with this, but in open source there’s an extra layer of complexity: the “I don’t care about market share” dev attitude that’s sometimes admirable and sometimes frustrating.
Agreed, it’s such a poor summary of the article that I can’t tell if it’s an intentional strawman argument.
Be so bold.
I’m not sure if you can show/hide like that, but as a workaround you can toggle auto-hiding with a qdbus command, and set a keyboard shortcut to run that.
I think OP said
if a window is fullscreen
as opposed to simply being maximized.
They mean cleaning the sheets you slept on and towels you used.
That’s awesome, I didn’t realize that ResidualVM had merged with ScummVM.
Don’t miss this entire genre: classic LucasArts point-and-click adventure games! Sam & Max Hit the Road, Full Throttle and Monkey Island are a few of the stand-outs for me, and they all run on Linux via the amazing ScummVM.
Sharper text for reading more comfortably, and viewing photos at nearly full resolution. You don’t have to discern individual pixels to benefit from either of these. And stuff you wouldn’t think of, like small thumbnails and icons can actually show some detail.
This may depend on browser but you can double-tap a paragraph to quickly zoom the page so the text is full-width. Of course there’s also pinch-zoom or reader mode…
The color screen of e-readers is too dark for me and substantially lacks contrast. It’s very noticable. The layer for pen recognition already makes the screen darker, but the color display is adding a lot more to the darkness and lack of contrast.
There were a handful of reasons I returned mine, but this was the biggest one. Color eink isn’t ready yet, and the limited color palette wasn’t even the worst part… it was the dark screen. Needing to use the backlight so often is just disappointing, and turning it on negates all the good stuff about eink, making you feel like you’re using a really shitty tablet. Maybe things will be better in a generation or two, but if you need color you might as well get a conventional tablet.
Unsubscribing is the polite option, but this obviously isn’t what you signed up for. I wouldn’t unsubscribe, just mark as spam. If enough people do and they start having deliverability issues of important emails, maybe they’ll change their ways… but probably they won’t.
edit: They’re probably not sophisticated enough to have separate lists, so you may have unsubscribed from everything, at least if you mark as spam you can find their important emails in your junk folder.
Mark the spam as spam.
You don’t have to look at the car’s main media screen. A simplified list UI is replicated onto a small window that temporarily shows up next to the speedometer.
Oh, good point. If I was being brand-proper I’d spell it “reMarkable”… but, lol, not doing that.
Settings/customizations file for legendary text editor vim. Remarkable’s comes with a lot of stuff built-in.
I was referring specifically to Remarkable-brand devices… but Kobos are nice too, with that company also being indifferent to aftermarket hacks.
Remarkable eink tablets. Buried deep in the settings they actually give you the root password so you can SSH in. Also, it comes with an epic .vimrc file.
Yep, that’s when you make a movie using the acting method.
Ctrl+F’d for this.