Just because you can take a hammer to it doesn’t mean that’s the best solution
In the right situation I imagine it could be a useful tool, much more subtle than just smashing the thing, less time consuming than taking it apart
Just because you can take a hammer to it doesn’t mean that’s the best solution
In the right situation I imagine it could be a useful tool, much more subtle than just smashing the thing, less time consuming than taking it apart
Not that I know of, I meant it could be put in a pressurised spray bottle, for example a deodorant can
If it’s bolted to a wall and unattended neither of those things are an option
You don’t necessarily need to put it into the air supply, could just bathe the specific device you want disabled in helium from a deodorant can or something
I suppose I could write a custom script that runs sudo echo or something so it’s cached
Have tried using it this way though the glaring issue for me is that I have to type the password at the end rather than start, meaning I’ll start a rebuild, go for something else then it’ll time out on the sudo password
What does remote sudo actually do I thought it was meant to be for doing remote builds over ssh
nix flake update && sudo nixod-rebuild switch
Shame it doesn’t support wayland
Systemctl hibernate/suspend not work?
I don’t think clientside anticheat is a good solution by any means.
Built in multiplayer cheats? Isn’t that just pay to win?
I think people misunderstood my comment, I meant I think the ddosers and the cheaters are more or less the same group. Don’t imagine the majority of people in the Linux community would think that’s a good way to get rockstar to listen
Cheating is absolutely not the same issue as piracy though, one is people wanting an unearned power trip over others and one is the service issue piracy is
You’re not gonna convince cheaters to stop cheating by offering them a better experience
That’s what I mean, I imagine most of the people ddosing are cheaters, hence the quotations around protesters
I’m pretty sure there’s not a valid reason for players to be able to spawn giant Ferris wheels in people’s garages, that seems like a fairly easy one to test for
I’m upset they nuked Linux support, my PC is Linux and have a steam deck
I’m still not going to fucking ddos them for it
They’re kinda proving rockstar’s point, I am fairly sure the venn diagram of “protesters” (ddosers) and cheaters is more or less a circle
This makes me glad not to be on the clock, I suck at remembering to do that stuff.
Though I tend to hyper focus on one thing for 4 or 5 hours at a time anyway
Not exactly what you’re asking for but you should look into tiling window managers, if I’m understanding correctly they do almost exactly what you want
For example on my laptop if I open Firefox it opens in full screen, if I open a terminal it resizes Firefox to half the screen and opens the terminal in the other half, a third and it splits whichever window I’m focused on vertically etc etc
You could achieve what you want by having the VMs in windowed mode and just using a tiling wm
You get the added bonus of virtual desktops that you can flick through with mouse buttons/keybinds/3 finger swipe if you want multiple layouts of different windows
Also I’ve not used it but I’m pretty sure hyprland has something called fake full screen where it tricks windows into thinking they’re full screen while actually being windowed
“tells the user the current time” would be an excellent comment for a clock
I’m not the best at commenting my code, but generally I just try to think of what information I’d want to know if looking at this 10 years from now
Imo comments are best used sparingly, don’t bother commenting something that anyone with a basic understanding of programming would understand straight away by reading the code
Functions should generally be commented with what parameters are and what they’re for, plus what they output
use reqwest::Client; // create a http client class that all other files can import // so as to only create one instance globally pub struct HttpClient { client: Client, } impl HttpClient { pub fn new() -> Self { HttpClient { client: Client::new(), } } pub fn client(&self) -> &Client { &self.client } }
Here’s an example where if I were to stumble onto this file 10 years from now, I might think wtf is this looking at it out of context, the comment explains why it exists and what it’s used for
(we’ll ignore the fact I totally didn’t just add this comment because I suck at commenting personal projects)