It's an amphibious exploring vehicle.
https://media1.tenor.com/m/bkFE81rvQjMAAAAd/amphibious-exploring.gif
oo1
The problem from my pov is, who is getting what support for ms? I just don't see it.
I used to be okay at using their stuff,
most of the people i've every worked with (in the public sector) did a less-than-average job of using the software.
They got by, now it's worse with office365 and sharrepoint and web-apps and shit like that everything has become extremely infuriating.
Whenever we have issues it seems that more money gets earmarked for more new microsoft products, the new shit will solve our problems.
Oh, except the budget for "developers" on that new thing is spent so we're perpetually "waiting until next development cycle".
The only things we have that are reliable are tools we build ourselves in python, SQL and so on - and we just have to support thm ourselves. We're not "developers" or anything mystical like that, but it's the only way to actually get stuff done that helps us work better.
Who is out there having a good experience with MS and where does all this support go? I'm genuinely curious.
Unions not interested in the balance of power between labour and capital?!
That figures, especially from a UK - or at least England perspective; I think they like life in Maggie's box.
It's like my union that seems to be far more effective at spamming me with sh*t about butlins discounts than it is at getting me a strike ballot in time.
dkd you mean Walesmaica?
Crazy.
It's not too much of a stretch to apply that to selling a CD; the vendor would have to prove that they didn't make a copy?
Guilty before proven innocent.
If you've done six impossble things this morning, why not round it off with breakfast at Milliways!
Actually thinking about it this urban-cycling guy also on youtube called shifter did a video about Edmonton changing over time.
Not really practical advice for you, but maybe some interesting stories - sadly none from the opposition so it's far from balanced.
https://yewtu.be/watch?v=KBvBw8kk7bw
I'm sure this is all very specific to that community - so maybe not that relevant. but it might be interesting nontheless.
I think there was a similar video about Montreal on his channel.
I guess he's looking at cites that are quite well developed in having removed some car infrastructure.
This bloke never really looks at public transport though; I guess he's not the first cyclist to shy away from a bus.
citynerd on yt mentioned this a while ago:
https://parkingreform.org/2023/11/30/a-message-from-citynerd-making-a-difference-with-prn/
i'm not in usa so i dont know if it's any use.
I guess learning may be part of the objective.
frankly I'd probably use one of those easy options in a new install.
But i'm personally glad to have gone through the process manually at least a couple of times on a few different systems, just to learn about various bits and pieces that may or may not be needed in different circumstances.
So yeah give that to students as a learning task - more useful than lots of the crap i was told to read.
I'd be surprised if it was a pre-requisite to do other coursework though
lineageos
I don't know about how well it supports Korean language though.
it is what it is.
Isn't the whole point of git that the repo is cloned in a million places. You can switch the remote repo really easily?
Maybe i'm wrong; I stopped using github years ago. And I don't do a lot of collaborative stuff, so I'm happy with just local git + rsync, local backups for most things. Maybe it has loads of unique features I've never noticed.
I'm sure there are ways to scrape other data off the platform too. For example:
https://docs.codeberg.org/advanced/migrating-repos/
I'm not saying the alternatives are necessarily better for every project. Maybe github really is best for some - but it is a choice of the project to use github. They can move if they prefer the set of features of another repository.
I'm not convinced by anyone using "critical mass" justification for choosing github, that sounds like stockholm syndrome even though you have a key to the door.
"Too lazy to switch" that's legitimate; if a wee bit dissapointing.
"Doesn't allow my special sauce proprietary licence" - well . . .