

Been using KDE exclusively on Wayland for over 2 years. What am I missing?
Been using KDE exclusively on Wayland for over 2 years. What am I missing?
Obviously they need to make exit
’s repr method raise a SystemExit
I’m grateful to Microsoft for Windows 11 providing me a bunch of free machines to stick in my basement and put Linux on.
My experience with Apple has been more like
I credit Apple in many ways for their choice to design their business in a way that their profit motive often aligns with their users’ interests.
Their app store model for iOS is one of the strongest examples of them not doing that though.
The 747 doesn’t have that bad a safety record. I’m more interested in what random radio transmissions occur from it.
They’re already getting that illegally so that wouldn’t change.
This is not how probability works.
Yeah, Steam is pretty much a monopoly. But I haven’t seen what I’d call monopolistic practices from them. It’s just that everyone else appears to fall flat on their faces when trying to make a competing product.
I’m less mad at Steam and Google because there are clear, simple ways to avoid their cuts.
I have no basis to say whether they’re providing a service worth the 30% charge. I’m also less mad at Steam than at Google because they’re being less shady about trying to push people into their store too.
Good way to check that all the parts are working before putting whatever you want on it.
Yes it does.
This also happened to a practicing immigration lawyer: https://bsky.app/profile/nicolemicheroni.bsky.social/post/3lmpvej6vn22t
I think a better analogy would be that you’re tuning your bike for better performance because the trade-offs of switching to a car are worse than keeping the bike.
It’s all about trade-offs. Here are a few reasons why one might care about performance in their Python code:
These are also performance benefits one can get essentially for free with linter rules.
Anecdotally: in my final year of university I took a computational physics class. Many of my classmates wrote their simulations in C or C++. I would rotate between Matlab, Octave and Python. During one of our labs where we wrote particle simulations, I wrote and ran Octave and Python simulations in the time it took my classmates to write their C/C++ versions, and the two fastest simulations in the class were my Octave and Python ones, respectively. (The professor’s own sim came in third place). The overhead my classmates had dealing with poorly optimised code that caused constant cache misses was far greater than the interpreter overhead in my code (though at the time I don’t think I could have explained why their code was so slow compared to mine).
A fourth digit? Is such a thing even possible?
This is a poorly designed horror trap. Here, let me help you!