You can configure this with window rules and autostart apps when Hyprland starts. That's not remembering what you had open the last time, but it will probably give you the experience you're looking for.
4 is the best "old" civ in that it still has square tiles and doomstacks. Also the modding scene is insane for 4, massive total makeovers that make it a completely different game, far more interesting mods than any other civ game.
They stole that and some other mechanics from Humankind, a game by the same studio as Endless Legend. It wasn't received that well in Humankind either, so I'm kinda surprised that they stole it anyway, but I guess line must go up and they didn't have a lot of inspiration themselves?
This simply isn't true. FF on Android is fine and allows you to use tons of extensions for far more things than ad blocking, such as the wonderful Consent-O-Matic that automatically deals with cookie popups for you. Huge timesaver on mobile.
I have read them. While Vaxry makes his points in typical Vaxry fashion he's not wrong IMHO.
I think it's ridiculous and unprecedented to demand that other open source projects adhere to the rules of another project. If more projects would do that then where will it end? The big COC wars where camps of open source projects are split and fractured along opinions of how one should moderate their own communities? This is not the way to work together with others.
The demand was not about Vaxry's own behaviour outside freedesktop, but about his community. I disagree that behaviour there reflects on freedesktop itself. Hell, I think a lot of people who use Hyprland couldn't even explain what freedesktop is and does.
So in my opinion Vaxry was right to refuse the demand, and right to publish the email conversation about it. Openness in open source about these sorts of things is important. His hostility in writing about it is something else altogether. Feel free to judge him on that, but it doesn't retroactively excuse freedesktop's behaviour.
Last part isn't true, he was banned for refusing to give his own community a COC that was compatible with the freedesktop one. Which is quite an overreach IMHO.
The inherent flaw is Qualcomm actually having to properly support one of their chipsets directly to customers for once, something they're apparently really bad at. This box has had some pretty bad press already, mostly due to the software being abysmal.
Nadeel: je gegevens gaan aan spammers verkocht worden, dus je gaat vaker telefonisch benaderd worden voor onzin. Maar dat is geen reden om het niet te doen natuurlijk, alleen maar irritant.
It is absolutely fine to mix tabs and spaces in Python, as long as you are consistent about it. It's not recommended though, as it's easy to mess up if you're not paying attention. Most IDE's will convert tabs to spaces anyway so it's a bit of a non-issue.
Object storage (the S3 API stuff) is the most logical answer here, it's much simpler and thus more reliable than solutions like Gluster, and the abstraction actually matches your use case. Otherwise something like an NFS share from a central fileserver works too.
But I agree with the other comment that you're trying to do kubernetes on hard mode and most likely with a worse result.
The EVE Online of today has very little to do with the game that came out 21 years ago. It's been kept up to date very well, the graphics are really nice and the game has been made a lot better for new players. A new expansion just dropped so now it's actually a pretty good time to try it out.
As for mining in peace: that's totally doable if you know what you're doing. The best advice would be to join a mining/building corporation as soon as possible and have them show you the ropes. The element of risk never goes completely away, and you should always be prepared to lose the ship you are flying, but the risks are very manageable, to the point where you should almost never lose a ship unless you're actively taking more risk.
Don't forget that games are significantly cheaper on PC, especially if you wait for the first sale (which'll come much quicker on PC). The upfront cost is indeed higher, but depending on how many games you buy you'll probably recoup that cost within one console generation.
You can configure this with window rules and autostart apps when Hyprland starts. That's not remembering what you had open the last time, but it will probably give you the experience you're looking for.