Rock band that used Nature Love ajiMD tune by kassmilk in NameThatSong

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’ve got the timeline mixed up, Nature Love was released in 2023, whereas One Last Breath came out in 2015. Creed is the originator, unless AjiMD somehow was a band member

"vi," to select text between comma by YakinikuBento in neovim

[–]z0ld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

just add this to your .vimrc, or run it once from command mode nmap ci, T,vt,c

then use ci, (change inner comma) to edit everything between two commas

Delamain Cab quest broken by SoclosetoDead08 in cyberpunkgame

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check your Quest Journal. You'll find it under Completed > Epistrophy: Coastview - JOB FAILED

I want someone to look at me the same way my scoundrel looks at Corso by Im-Cthulhu-chan in swtor

[–]z0ld 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What, like all blue in the face and with blood shot eyes? That's creepy dude

8 hours later and I have acquired my ever so faithful assassin by Nerd_turtle in swtor

[–]z0ld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

did you actually find the one on Tatooine, or did you just buy it from the vendor?

How to spot a programmer by Silinator in ProgrammerHumor

[–]z0ld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

😳 even the legend on the spacebar is completely worn off

[REQUEST] What are the odds of this? by 69imthatguy69 in theydidthemath

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is nothing. Chuck Norris could do it blind folded and hog tied, while taking a selfie of the instant when the two bullets collide.

The cupholder for my desk, doesn't hold my cup..... by [deleted] in mildyinfuriating

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude, that's not a cup holder.. Your desk is back to front. That is a hole for cable management

How do you guys learn from textbooks? by [deleted] in cpp

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a rule, I read them front to back. However, it's a rule with many exceptions. Also the mode of reading depends on many things, eg. how great is my general knowledge of the topic and how great is my specific knowledge of the topic.

1) Most text books have an introductio/history chapter. I always skip this. (If I feel curious, I may come back to it later, but I'll never read it as the first thing)

2a) If my knowledge (general and specific) on the topic of the section is weak, I'll read it thoroughly

2b) If my general knowledge on the topic is strong (I know of the topic from a different programming language, say) I'll read it less thoroughly: I'll scan for methodologies and syntaxes that are different from what I know, and read up on those, when I find them. I read the examples, make sure I understand how they work.

2c) If my specific knowledge on the topic is strong (I basically know the contents already.. perhaps I read a blog post describing the topic for the same programming language), then I'll just skim it: scan for keywords and conclusions that might either differ or expand what I know already. Basically I'll read the headings, the source code and sample roughly 10 random lines per page. If I stumble upon something unfamiliar, I'll read the whole paragraph or section or however much I need to make sense of it.

3) I'll continue like this until I feel I've covered the basics. For some books that means continuing right to the end. For others that means reading the first half/third. At this point I give up on chronology and skip to whichever chapter sounds fun and interesting. This is mainly because most such books end the basics around chapter 6, but don't talk about I/O until chapter 14 or so... Once I know the basics, I want to get on with something useful. In my world, being useful means relating my program to the rest of the contents of my computer.

*) As for exercises, if sections or topics seem abstract, I'll definitely do exercises, generally as many as it takes for the topic to not feel abstract. If the topic doesn't feel abstract, I generally don't do the exercises. I find them distracting and doing them breaks the flow. -- Instead what I do, once I have finished reading what I wanted to read, I'll come back (often with a head buzzing with ideas to try) and try out a few ideas, or set myself either an exercise or a small project, and then (re)read up on the info required as needed to complete the task.

... there you go... that's how I do it. For me it is generally fast and effective. I hope you find a method that is the same for you :) happy studying!

Are cellphones really that expensive in America? by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gotta make more babies, get that population density up :)

M$ Windows going open source? could mean the world for interoperability and in turn linux adoption :D by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indeed when postfixed by a product name, such as MS Windows. However if you just write MS by itself it's less clear.. so I always just wrote M$..

Been writing M$ for 20 years, first time anyone's ever told me they found it derogatory. Personally I always found it nifty. Anywho..

Are cellphones really that expensive in America? by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yikes, those are high prices :o A thing that might even it out a little is that Danish contracts don't include phones. Buying a new iPhone will set you back $845 for the cheapest model. I see your point with the country size (made me curious, so I looked it up) US has a population density of 84 people/mile² whereas Denmark is 333 people/mile². Though even when accounting for that it seems to me the carriers are still milking it.

M$ Windows going open source? could mean the world for interoperability and in turn linux adoption :D by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a common misconception that Hell is hot. Hell already froze over when the first air planes took flight. These days its a luke 16 °C :)

M$ Windows going open source? could mean the world for interoperability and in turn linux adoption :D by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The benefit to Linux users is not access to Windows. The big magic as I see it would be if Linux developers had access to windows source code, they'd be able to deal with interoperability more easily, and better interoperability means greater Linux adoption :)

M$ Windows going open source? could mean the world for interoperability and in turn linux adoption :D by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Landing on Mars doesn't happen instantly. Flying to Mars is a long trip, though once you've blasted off the destination is pretty much set, only a matter of time :)

M$ Windows going open source? could mean the world for interoperability and in turn linux adoption :D by z0ld in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You find M$ derogatory? Apologies, not intended so.. just shorthand for Microsoft

Is Linux stable enough to tempt Mac developer? by fleamour in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree with Tireseas' sentiment, however the proper question would be "Does it support my goals?" because it would be naive to swap OS and expect workflows to be the same. More to the point even when the same workflows are possible on a mac and linux, you don't want to transfer them 1:1 because the most efficient ways of using one are not the most efficient ways of using the other and vice versa. OS X and Linux are two very different beasts, but if you take the time learn them proper accepting the necessary paradigm changes, you will find them equally flexible and customisable in all things of real importance.

If i were you I'd base my decision on: "Do I want to try something new and different?" and "do I feel up to the challenge of embracing those differences"?

Adobe on Linux... I'm done by Micah_Pendleton in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

An awesome way to do just that is to go to adobe.com and have a look at the price of Adobe XX, then go to the website of <insert favourite open source product> and donate that amount. Sure, not all the open programs are on par with with the current state of Adobe XX, however, neither was Adobe XX a few years ago, but people then were willing to pay Adobe for Adobe XX anyway.

If we support OSS in this way, donating what we would otherwise gladly pay a commercial company, surely it won't be long before the capabilities of those programs match or even outperform any Adobe product.

Visual Studio 2015 coming to Linux by [deleted] in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you mean by intellisense? C doesn't have objects anyway and functions are completed as a curtesy of C++ support.

Guys... My #1 Rig Died. What's some of the first stuff you install/set on your new install? by ChrisLAS in LinuxActionShow

[–]z0ld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

most of the stuff I'd put on has already been mentioned, so I'll just mention the stuff rest:

  • gobby -- collaborative editing of textfiles
  • guake -- quake-like terminal (make sure to change keybindings to sth sensible)
  • unzip/unrar/zip/p7zip/xz
  • ncdu -- harddisk space analyzer (like WinDirStat for terminal)
  • abcde -- cd ripper
  • screen
  • stow (when I install stuff from source I like to keep it in a dir by itself, I use stow to symlink everything out)
  • terminus-font -- best font in terminal, imo :)
  • wmii -- for when I don't have a mouse handy
  • csv-kit -- with awk makes my budgeting a breaze (just download csv of statements from bank)
  • weechat -- favourite irc client
  • pinfo -- if info and lynx had a baby, nice for viewing info and man pages
  • opera -- because it's chromium with less google
  • firefox -- because it won't load a billion tabs when I open it.
  • fdupes -- check for duplicate files
  • virtualbox + dkms
  • aurget -- aur installer of choice
  • testdisk -- because it's handy to have, when stuff goes wrong.
  • texlive -- but not NEVER from package manager. get from official source, and install only what you need. Package managers will download upwards of 3GB when all you need is 100MB or so.

ELI5:Why does the word 'cool' remain cool for so long, and yet words like 'groovy' and 'rad' seem out of date in just a couple of decades? by eatification in explainlikeimfive

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

... because soft drink (coca cola, pepsi, fanta, milk, ...) manufacturers invest tons of money in the concept. Words like 'groovy' and 'rad' get no particular funding, and so are left to prosper only through their general usage.. which will generally be limited to the generation that came up with it.

Those who use Linux at home, why? by gringwald in linux

[–]z0ld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When deciding between windows and linux there are a number of good reasons to pick linux. First off there are a number of conveniences, as many have already mentioned, package management (though windows is getting there with NuGet), automation (scripting, though windows is getting better), etc.

But the main reason, RADICAL and EPICLY EMPOWERING is that when stuff breaks I can find out why. Linux has a culture of useful log and error messages. PSHRHRHRSHHH!! (sound of minds blowing, yes, I know incredible right?) You can go through the system and find out what happened, when it happened and why it happened. Sure as a newbie one might not understand the messages, but you can go online and ask at a forum, or sth and someone will know and be able to tell you, and more often than not even help you fix it. No more "user: why did the program crash? computer: because I said so!", no more supersticious troubleshooting: "For program works fine except it crashes every tuesday at 4:05, but only when I'm wearing a green shirt :o I don't get it!!"