Buildout

joined 1 year ago
[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

EndeavourOS has an i3 version. That's how I started i3, and I'm still running it after almost 2 years. Comes pretty well set up in my opinion.

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 10 points 2 months ago

Manjaro has me dying, lol.

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I would recommend learning vim in that case. I'm not sure about the availability of vi(m)/emacs on the systems you remote into, but if I was a betting man I'd say vi is more available than vim is more available than emacs. But if you learn vim and are stuck with vi one time it's still better than nano (for me, but I'm sure you're quite good with nano). Another benefit that extends outside of your text editing experience is that vim motions are offered out of the box for a lot of linux utilities (less) with no setup, or can be trivially added (tmux), which gives you familiar keybinding almost everywhere as well as an improved ergonomic (and likely speed) advantage.

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Thanks for the insight. Just to be clear, your suggestion is: auto-update as much stuff as possible and don't worry about it?

 

I manage a WordPress site hosted on SiteGround for a friend. The website keeps going down due to updates of some sort or another, and I'm trying to resolve this issue.

SiteGround forces major and minor auto-updates at least every 3 days (if available), and offers the option to autoupdate plugins (which I have on). Inside of the WordPress admin page, none of the plugins are set to auto-update, and I can see some offering to update individually/manually.

My question is this: what is the intended update model for WordPress? Should I just set everything to autoupdate to the extent possible? Although I'm facing issues now, my other software experiences tell me this is a bad idea. I'm used to "update when you want or need a new feature, but nothing will break if you don't", but is this just not how WordPress was designed?

Thanks!

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Nice photo!

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 6 points 3 months ago

Dying. Works every time first time and they never come back.

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

This game informed a lot of my early musical tastes and probably contributed to my current tastes in one way or another.

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Editor, Atom, Rust

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago

I use and like Zotero and the one-click-save feature in Firefox is very convenient (IIRC, it takes a few minutes to set up though).

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

That's the screenshot from the original post..?

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 7 points 4 months ago

T = O(n) means that there exists a single constant k such that T < kn for all sufficiently large n. Therefore O(n!^2) is not the the same as O(n!), but for example both 10n!, 10000n!, n! + n^2 (note the plus) are O(n!).

Another way to think about this: suppose you believe that O(n) and O(n^2) are distinct. Now plug in only numbers that are factorials (2, 6, 24, ...).

[–] Buildout@lemmy.world 7 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Have I ever told you the story of Darth Microsoft Teams? Only Chrome and Edge. Some limited stuff works in Firefox, but it's flaky at best.

 

The print preview is taking about 2 minutes to generate in Firefox, and for the last 15 seconds the entire Firefox window becomes unresponsive. I am only "printing" to a PDF to save, and I have no printers connected to my (modern) laptop.

When I tried on Chrome for comparison, it takes about 30 seconds (still a ridiculous amount of time) but without the freezing behavior.

I tried setting print.prefer_system_dialog to false (which does not generate a preview that I can see), but Firefox still takes just as long to pop up the system dialog and the window still freezes.

I only really care about fixing the problem with Firefox. Any suggestions are welcome, thanks!

Info:

  • Mozilla Firefox 121.0
  • Google Chrome 120.0.6099.129
  • 11th gen Intel laptop on Arch Linux
 

I am getting an error when uploading an image from a local file:

SyntaxError: JSON.parse: unexpected character at line 1 column 1 of the JSON data

Even after the error the file name appears in the image name section, but when posted no image is actually included. I have seen another similar post to this about a month ago, but OP said issue was fixed (not the case for me on Linux and Firefox). For what it's worth, the issue also appears on Photon (in addition to standard UI).

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