

I’m gonna guess you don’t live in a hot country.


I’m gonna guess you don’t live in a hot country.


At least when I had to create a DSL in a project I gave it a fitting name: Bullscript.
Same, though I’ve started having some issues with their slower updates not catching up to changes on OSs and stuff (using it on an atomic distro for example is quite a pain).


No idea why you’re being downvoted, the guy who created Stardew literally had his wife take care of his whole life for him while he was working on it.


For me it was my older brother (who owned the only computer in the house). He had very strict rules about what I could do on his PC but even then he would only leave his room unlocked once a week at most. This was before I even cared for internet so being offline was no big deal.
When I was 13 I managed to talk my way into doing some chores for a neighborhood PC school in exchange for access to computers whenever there was some free spot in any of their classes. A couple years later they opened a Lan House so I worked there and could finally use PCs all day every day. One more year and I was already teaching programming classes there (well, trying to).


The DS would not be able to connect to OP’s network to begin with.


It’s a little bit of both. It was not rare to see people in their 60s but it was also not an age most people expected to reach.


No, but life style changes may reveal you had ADHD all along and had just been lucky enough to be unaffected by it.


After three months exactly when a crowd was organized near his house.
And it’s specific to slack? Or do you have the same issue when sharing the screen on anything else?
Try an atomic distro too, if you haven’t yet. It’s a completely different experience from regular Linux - specially the ones that take care of everything for you like UBlue’s.


It’s quite like reddit, but without threads or subs: just a nearly infinite list of comments made on anything. You only get to see what a comment (tweet) is about when there’s a tag on them or when they are a response to another tweet.
Twitter’s UX was generally better suited for some stuff like live events where you may want to see other people’s comments but only in real time - a 3 minute old tweet in this context is just useless data.


Is there even an ecosystem? I don’t think I have heard of anything for Lua itself, just the stuff that embed it.


Golf Story.
Early in a console’s life cycle I tend to be more generous with what games I’m willing to try. Usually I end up finding some games that turn out to be quite fine, but Golf Story was actually great.
I wouldn’t say it’s the best game on switch, but it’s much better than people give it credit for and I recommend it enthusiastically to make up for it.


I hate the default style of gnome as well but it can be customized to look more like KDE, while still being much more stable and user friendly than it.


Mint is king for old hardware but you wouldn’t have been so lucky with a newish PC.


I’m surprised people aren’t complaing that the switch 2 still has so few games.


Nearly 20 years ago in one of my first jobs I made a small time calculator. Like, just a basic calculator but if you typed 45 * 2 it would show 01:30. I thought it was super cool and useful and I kept a copy of its binary so I could use it whenever I needed.
I still have it. And still haven’t used it. But it’s cool.
Mario 3, though these days I get tired of it after a World or two and haven’t completed it in a while.
Also Xenogears from the PS1 is still one of my favorite games and I replay it every few years.