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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)JO
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2 yr. ago

  • As a primary Linux user who wrote his own X tool to do exactly this and has been missing this functionality on Mac - thank you!

    I'll send my unpublished code your way soon. It's just Go, relying on the WM (run command shortcuts) to call it. Move+Resize and Focus functionality.

    It won't work on Wayland, which seems to require native compositor support - labWC is halfway there.

    edit: check your PMs

  • When covid had everyone working from home and avoiding social contact, I started my gaming journey with Firewatch and The Long Dark, and Factorio. All are excellent. Alien Isolation and The Forest came later.

  • TinyLinux (booting from DOS), Slackware, Debian for many years, Ubuntu, Debian, Ubuntu, Debian, Arch for 10+ years.

    RH/CentOS/Amazon Linux for work these last 20 years.

    I switched to Arch because ubuntu & debian started asking too many interactive questions when upgrading packages, instead of just upgrading. Arch gets out of my way, and has great documentation if something unexpected should break.

  • They will also be terminating another 5-10% of their EU userbase this month for not accepting their latest price hikes. These will mostly be the low-volume users who were too lazy to cancel.

    Wait for the special offers before signing up for a plan again, folks. And explore the alternatives in the mean time... you might just discover that you don't need them.

  • Who cares?

    My company's 9,000 CentOS machines and over 100,000 containers now mostly run Amazon Linux or Alpine. Rocky Linux was preferred by some, but we led the way and the rest followed. Our final licensed RH systems will also disappear this quarter (legacies of a DC-centric era), and we will be free of them.

    It was inertia that kept us with RH, but their bad faith moves kicked us into action. We now have better security tooling and processes all around, too.

    Good riddance, Red Hat (and IBM, until your next acquisition and corporate strangling)!