Seems to have been fixed 100% now. 🎉
The third Lemmy picture was rendering full width, it’s now icon sized.
Seems to have been fixed 100% now. 🎉
The third Lemmy picture was rendering full width, it’s now icon sized.
Don’t hurt me
Brush tools.
I would encourage you not to split things up too finely. A single repo for your environment would allow you to see all related changes with git. E.g. if you set up a new VM it might need a playbook to set something up, a script to automate a task, and a DNS entry. With a well put together commit message explaining why you’re making those changes there’s not much need for external documentation.
Maybe if you want some more info organised in a wiki, point to the initial commit where you introduced some set up. That way you can see how something was structured. Or if you have a issue tracker you can comment with research on something and then close the issue when you commit a resolution.
Try not to have info spread out too much or maintaining all the pieces will become a chore. Make it simple and easy to keep up.
Usually aluminium or glass. There’s a metallic coating applied to the outside surfaces that stores the data. That layer is very thin though, so most of the material is the substrate.
Oh right, that makes sense. I was only thinking of Matter as serving low bandwidth devices but it also runs over WiFi and ethernet so I guess it can do video for security cameras etc. and evidently Casting audio and video also.
Also Matter is the smart home interop standard. Seems close enough for some confusion in what Matter compatible means on a device.
No, that’s crows. Your thinking of school.
For sure. It’d be nice to have the units in a separate namespace but at least Numbat won’t let you override identifiers already defined in the system of measure. I use Pint on Python - I usually keep the units in an identifier named u
so they can’t get accidentally overridden. That means either using u.km
for single units or u('g/cm^3')
for composite units. It’d be great if the language could separate units e.g. as [
or `` but getting a compact syntax to distinguish the units namespace without colliding with other language features would be tricky. I remember F# having a good syntax but didn’t dive that deep since it’s not used widely in my field. ]
Ah, you’re travelling in to London’); DROP TABLE Airports;-- today? And how is the weather in North Korea?
Core utils has this AI built in: yes
Liberté, égalité, fromagé ou la mort!
Make sure it doesn’t go from suck to blow!
I think you’d only have to read it once, then you should be able to just filter it out next time you see it.
- Sent from my iPhone