

Ah no, what I do is “let me repeat to see if I understood correctly” and then tell my version.
Ah no, what I do is “let me repeat to see if I understood correctly” and then tell my version.
I know you are joking but it’s a really good way to convey that you understood what they said, or to make sure you did. I do it all the time when being on the same page is important.
Can you install an app with GUI in a distrobox that then shows up on the app list? That’d be amazing but I doubt it since it’s using containerization, I wonder what “tightly integrated” really means. Anyway, I’ll look it up, thanks!
Discover is a KDE thing, not a fedora thing. Not fedora exclusive.
I’d go for an atomic distro if it weren’t for the AUR. It’s too comfy.
Good for you that EOS now runs on systemd-boot, not grub lol. It grabs the EFI lines automatically from the boot partition and it just works. Personally, booting should be as simple as possible, as little personalisation as possible, make it just work.
I sometimes forget or delay updates because of life and have over 500 updates. Skim through them if they are patches, minors or majors, and just run. In any case, my disk’s are brtfs and I have timeshift for backups. If anything breaks horribly a live USB can restore it, if anything is weird I can restore it via UI. It autoruns every time I run Pacman and stores 5 copies of the “before” state. It also creates a daily copy for the last 5 days so 10 copies in total.
It’s more than enough that if something fails I’ll have something to go back to, and since it internally works with something akin to hardlinks snapshots don’t take that much space.
I’ve not had issues since setting it up, so, great.
well, I wouldn’t say that’s my case since most of my job postings are of spaniard consultant companies that have projects for banks. Also, data engineering is kinda different from generic software dev, we build data manipulation pipelines, database migrations… etc. Not many end user facing applications or APIs or such, most input/output is databases.
I don’t really get the “city” sentiment since I only search for countrywide remote jobs (Spain), but country by country the experience will differ ofc. I also specialised myself really quick into a data based field which is needed since all the fucking banks want to update their 3 decade or older systems. And by the time all of them finish being updated they will need to be updated again sooooo… :)
I work in IT and have no shortage of offers in linkedin. In hiring season it’s like 3 a week. I did go to the workforce with a masters though. 5 years of education in total. Also, tbh, I’m a senior dev now (+7 years of experience) so the playing field changes a lot.
Tell your friend to search for startups that don’t pay that well just to get the initial 2 years of experience, then jump up.
counterpoint, if that email was problematic with reply all, should have been privately chatted instead. replyall should be the default options because the amount of times in a single chain that i had to answer with something asinine (including xyz again so they can give feedback about it) just to include everyone again… way too many.
Look at those gerrymandered counties! Precious!
/s
Why are you selectively choosing to consider only the “new kingdom” part of the whole thing? Overall it’s from 3150 BC – 30 BC
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egypt
I can also reach to whatever conclusion if I decide to ignore what doesn’t fit and modify what does to make it fit better. That’s wrong…
Average out of which number? There has not been enough empires in human history to get any kind of valid statistical conclusion.
Also, the ancient egyptian empire lasted over 3k years, for you to get an average of 250y with such outlier you would need to include what, several 10y “empires”, or divide empires by ruler. Which would then make the conversation moot since each US president would be a new “empire”.
The claim comes from John Glubb, and he used this chart to make the average out of… 11 data points!?! While missing tons of other ancient empires that lasted thousands of years?!
This is the book where he makes such claim
So to answer your comment, yeah math is easy. Impossible to reach such average number with all the data though, given that it was made with a wildly incomplete and incorrect data…
Rn I’m in a project where everyone that has access to the code is given the role of owner of the group so we have permissions to skip any and all measures since owners don’t care.
I’m so happy that tomorrow is my last day. So happy.
Oh, then it didn’t land on me, sorry.
It would have been funnier if you had put the correct fruit tho 🥭
Piña.
Probably bad autocorrect tbh.like Futo or auto key set in multi language or something.
HUH?!
Aaaahhhh.