![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8365f36c-52fd-4996-9b50-6924ae68708d.webp)
![](https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/dbeda0de-d3fb-4fab-8703-3e52e72cb4db.jpeg)
That’s what the asteroid belt is for!
That’s what the asteroid belt is for!
I first used Matplotlib 10 years ago. It was unintuitive and very slowly redrawing the whole plot each time you tried to zoom.
I’m using it right now, and I’m happy to report that it kept to it’s time-honored tradition - zoom is still piss-slow even on my fancy new PC with 12 cores.
Maybe in the next 20 years, matplotlib devs will discover wonders of tile cache.
It’s made worse by the fact C++11 made a lot of solutions for the deep problems in the language. As the C++ tradition dictates, the problems themselves are carefully preserved for backward compatibility, the solutions are like a whole different language.
And Lisp is small - the first Google result provides a Lisp interpreter in 117 lines of Python code.
C++ is OVERWHELMINGLY SUPERIOR, if you ask any professional C++ developer.
Subway that arrives almost to my office. Yes it’s a bit slower overall, but I can doomscroll my phone for a hour per day instead of rotating the wheel for the same amount of time.
I’ve had problems with KDE on Wayland on Debian 12, it fails when entering sleep mode with multiple monitors. Thankfully, KDE on X is just one package install away, and it works with no bugs.
I’ve switched to X11 last week, because kwin_wayland crashes each time my monitor enters low-power mode.
Because the communism is a convenient ideology for totalitarian states to exploit and control the population.
It’s exactly like the middle-ages Christianity, with the Bible promoting humanitarian ideology, and the church exploiting the hell out of the population.
That’s also why communists banned all religions, they don’t want any competition.
Wooo yeah! Now waiting for the explanation how half of mobile phones on the planet and every smart TV in existence runs some variant of Linux kernel.
Just grab yourself some Linux Mint, and try to ignore Arch and Gentoo crowd here.
Half of the apps you mentioned have Linux version right in the system package manager. Davinci has Linux version on their website.
CorelDraw might be a problem, WineHQ lists it’s compatibility for the latest version as garbage, so you will probably need to switch to Inkscape.
Anyway, I heard about this new company called Linux
Pedantic explanation about GNU/Linux is coming in 3… 2… 1…
Peak evolution
I am using only one monitor. It’s hard enough to position it to avoid glare from windows and overhead lamps, I cannot imagine doing it with two.
I also have 15 virtual desktops, so there’s that.
Nobody here cares what os they use in their office pc.
Yup, that’s how it’s supposed to be. You turn on your PC to get your office work done, not to reinstall display drivers each day.
Gone are the days when you needed to compile your own modem drivers to access Internet from your Linux PC.
The Linux experts here are using their technical knowledge to perform advanced tasks like setting up server clusters for AI-generated furry porn, they are definitely not the ‘average’ Linux user.
Are there any new phones or tablets using Tegra SoC? It seems like they are only used in car electronics
Let them munch me. It’s not like they are infectious, they were zombified using eco-friendly voodoo ritual, not zombie virus.
Because OpenVPN lacks the most important feature of them all - it will not remind you to top up your account balance.
I went with OpenVPN because it’s installed on Ubuntu by default. Wireguard needs one extra apt-get command.
I don’t think that Wireguard is more secure, its’s simpler and thus easier to audit, but OpenVPN was audited to the gills already.
Because installing some random app is worse than simply using pre-installed system service.
Both are security audited, but I’d still rather trust OpenVPN.
Just do a quick simple
sudo apt-get install task-kde-desktop