I enjoy OpenMW and I’m happy to host if you want, although my instance is basically just me and a few friends right now.
I enjoy OpenMW and I’m happy to host if you want, although my instance is basically just me and a few friends right now.
I think they’re lawful evil, more devils than demons.
In my experience I haven’t had an issue because usually the refactorings are small. If they’re not I just hop on a call with the person who wrote the MR and ask them to walk me through it.
In theory I’d like to have time to dedicate solely to code health, but that’s not quite the situation in basically any team I’ve been in.
You should refactor as needed as you go because refactoring cases are never gonna be prioritised.
There’s a markdown entry thing in the drop down menu that’ll convert your MD to their formatting.
I’m running on 0.19.3 without any issues on Linux arm64. I built my own docker image though.
The web is built on hot linking hypermedia. It is more fragile obviously, but it distributes the bandwidth and storage load. If nobody hotlinked, then small forum admins/Lemmy admins/etc. have considerably more cost to bear.
Rust is roughly similar to C in most of these benchmarks and beats it in a few: https://benchmarksgame-team.pages.debian.net/benchmarksgame/fastest/rust.html
Arguably when LLVM gets a bit better, Rust can be even faster than C because rust can be optimised in more places safely than C code can. The issue is that LLVM wasn’t written with that in mind, so some performance is left on the table.
Go, Java, and Nim (in most cases) are all memory safe but are generally slower than C or C++ due to the ways they achieve memory safety.
Rust’s memory safety approach is zero-cost performance wise, which makes it practical for low level, high throughput, and low latency applications.
That flag exists, it’s called unsafe
for if you need to tell the borrow checker to trust you or unwrap
if you don’t want to deal with handling errors on most ADTs.
You can always cast anything to an unmanaged pointer type and use it in unsafe code.
A crash is different to a SEGFAULT. I’d be very surprised to see a safe rust program segfault unless it was actively exploiting a compiler bug.
I miss circles
Manjaro and Antergos are just asking for trouble. If you want Arch, use Arch. Otherwise Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint, and Fedora are popular.
I don’t think the full Radeon suite is on Linux but there are tools for screen recording like simple screen recorder and OBS.
There is lots of 3rd party software available on all of these distros in their respective package managers, but Ubuntu has the advantage with PPAs allowing for more 3rd party repos to be easily added to the package manager.
HDR support is still very early/basic right now: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/HDR_monitor_support
Good Girl by Aquilo. It brings up a lot of relatable feelings around growing up Christian and ultimately is quite sweet.
I don’t think there’s any malice here. Someone just forgot to put up a robots.txt on the bard website.
Wow that website is cancer to load on mobile.
I don’t think ActivityPub supports that. There’s just the “sensitive” flag (which Mastodon shows as a content warning and lemmy shows as NSFW). I think you’d have to do something outside of the specification.
eh I use Linux on my desktop but macOS is a nicely polished UNIX operating system. It’s only locked down for average users, you can usually get away with a quick sudo
or worst-case going into single user mode and disabling some system protections.
I definitely prefer using *nix operating systems, and macOS gives me that for portable computing. I’m still more productive on Linux, but it’s not too far apart.
It uses other signals too, like what other sites you’ve visited with that checkbox on it, what CloudFlare has seen your IP address doing in the past, etc.
The google one is able to see if you’re logged into a google account and take that into account.
There’s even a new variant of the Google captcha that is invisible and doesn’t even bother to show a checkbox.