

Is there a context to this or just random thought?
Is there a context to this or just random thought?
Sneakernet to the rescue. Some of you are too young to know about walking around with boxes full of disks.
Knowing that git blame
exists, and Linus in general, indeed a git flog
isn’t that improbable.
Imagine launching weather satellites and there is suddenly a whole new continental society living peacefully by intentionally avoiding rest of the world.
(I know this is absurd at several levels)
Re flog is when your devs don’t follow your guides and mess uo git history again.
Reflog, when flogging isn’t enough.
Yeah, I hate it when my repo is a chain of merge commits. I want to see actual changes to the code, not branch management history.
It wasn’t only in Germany. It first started in Italy as Fascism, and became popular all over the place. As with many Italian inventions, Germans “improved” it and made Nazizm. But they also inspired a lot of similar racist movements, especially around Europe. Captain America was published in 1938 specifically because some comic artists worried Hitler was becoming too popular in USA.
There are good open source puzzle and solitaire games that are not resource hogs.
No solitaire but I strongly recommend Simon Tatham’s Portable Puzzle Collection.
There is Neovim but yeah, not the same thing.
I had a lot of fun with Cat Quest. Monument Valley is pretty good too. Go series based on famous video games are also fun puzzles. Start with Hitman Go, then Lara Croft Go, then I lost interes at Deus Ex Go, I don’t know if they made more.
So does Ubuntu, but there is a catch. Secure boot relies on signature checking, so you can manually add the signature of your OS manually to the UEFI db, but can’t do that on locked UEFI. Major Linux providers went another route, they paid Microsoft to sign a shim
binary, which in turn can verify and boot the matching Linux kernels. Microsoft refusing to sign shims would be a rather crippling move, but they would get a massive backlash from that.
You aren’t making the point you think you’re making.