Omg, it’s scary how accurate this is!
I am a nerd!
I am:
@clb92@feddit.dk (MAIN LEMMY PROFILE)
@clb92@mastodon.social (Main Mastodon profile)
@clb92@kbin.social
@clb92@lemmy.world
@clb92@lemmy.ml
And /u/clb92 on Reddit (and many other places)
Omg, it’s scary how accurate this is!
I am a nerd!
I’ve previously used versions 1.4.* and 1.5.* quite a bit for print, because I’m a one-man marketing department in a tiny company.
Scribus was (is?) somewhat finicky and cumbersome to work with. It had certain quirks and workarounds you had to learn to deal with. It lacked many creative features you find in bigger suites. I didn’t feel like I worked quickly and efficiently in it. BUT I got my work done in it nevertheless, and I really appreciate that it exists for the people that simply can’t afford the alternatives.
Nowadays I use the Affinity suite, which includes Affinity Publisher, a competitor to InDesign. It’s quite affordable and not subscription-based.
I’ve found that they don’t always fit properly in all female Micro USB connectors, but they are quite interesting.
Most of the problems I’ve experienced with Ubuntu recently were caused by Snap. I really hate that they insist shipping that buggy mess.
If you read this comment, including fragments or subsets of this comment, even if not read to its full extent, not read aloud or not read willingly, you agree to waive your right to murder anyone, including but not limited to persons who have previously read your parent comment, and including said persons’ families, in perpetuity.
Did you check that the date and time is set correctly in the BIOS?
I’ve restored my N++ session of unsaved notes from backup more than once.
What about the predictable beginning and the predictable middle part, between the beginning and the end? I usually just skip those too.
most of the things in internet are unstrustable for me.
Why would you trust random people instead of the official Searx repository then? That makes no sense.
We should just do it every weekend.
Well that’s on you then.
1. Keep encrypted backups of your password database, so that you can migrate to something else if you need to.
B. Make sure to have your password database synced to your phone or accessible in some other way when you’re out and about.
III. If purely offline and local password manager with no syncing, have a way for a trusted person to be able to access it, if you need them to.
• Lastly, attempt to not suffer memory loss and forget your main credentials to the password manager.
haha php bad, kill yourself 👌 lolol 💯👌👌😂😂😂
If you’re going to make these “If programming languages were X” jokes, at least be a little bit creative with them.
I’m raised in a time were foxes had forelimbs
…and were bigger than a planet and were made of fire? Sure grandpa, let’s get you to to bed now.
(The second one is indeed really good)
Do you mean BitChute? Because Bitbucket is a Git repository solution from Atlassian.
Nebula has about 10.000 videos, from only select creators. Youtube has around 1 billion videos, and everyone can upload. Nebula is not actually a Youtube alternative unless you’re in one of two specific target audiences:
I don’t see Nebula opening up their site to everyone and letting anyone upload content any time soon, and for that reason I don’t see them as a Youtube competitor at all. They’ve found their niche with curated quality over quantity.
Fun fact: The difference between 10.000 and 1 billion is… around 1 billion.
I’m guessing something like… Copy file/dir from location A to location B and then delete from A, but the copy had failed (and the delete unfortunately worked fine)?