

For Lua I think it’s just for the interpreted version, I’ve heard that LuaJIT is amazingly fast (comparable to C++ code), and that’s what for example Löve (game engine) uses, and probably many other projects as well.
For Lua I think it’s just for the interpreted version, I’ve heard that LuaJIT is amazingly fast (comparable to C++ code), and that’s what for example Löve (game engine) uses, and probably many other projects as well.
I see few of these, but there might be more:
The icons on the desktop are too apart from each other.
The icon for a floppy disk is much different to what’s on Windows XP.
I think program names in the taskbar are 1 or 2 pixels too high, but I might be wrong.
The icons in the notification area are too close to each other.
Last icon in the notification area is too close to the clock.
There’s too much padding to the left of notification area icons.
There’s too much padding to the right of the taskbar clock.
If they can’t I’d either recommend to use Linux or buy a new computer. I wouldn’t want to support “unsupported” installation of Windows 11 on “older” hardware, even if it worked perfectly fine as of now, since that would be asking for problems later.
Why even have any effects at all? They are distracting as shit.
It’s better for them to upgrade to windows 11 than stay on unsecure OS.
Why do these people not use bookmarks?
I sometimes have like 20 tabs open, but half of them are pinned which I use most of the time, and the rest is current stuff that I close when I am done with them.
What do you mean? If you run powershell
directly it opens up either in conhost
or Windows Terminal, depending on whatever is your default, doesn’t it? Unless you mean PowerShell ISE or whatever it’s called.
Slow as shit though.
That’s why I like playing older games. You launch them and start playing immediately.
There was only one time when Microsoft cared about having consistent UI and even did a lot of research on how to make operating system easier for people that didn’t use computers before. It was when they developed Windows 95.
I was always wondering why there’s no real audio-based interface for blind people, instead of trying to describe what’s on the screen. Have this ever been tried out?
Programming for accessibility is one of these things that I always fascinated me, and it makes me sad that support for it no longer matters for a lot of software developers. Maybe it’s something I am going to try to do? Is there any documentation where to start with that?
Huh, that’s a pretty good idea. I already have a Raspberry Pi setup at home, and it wouldn’t be hard to duplicate.
I don’t 🙃
Why not make Ubuntu a GNU/ Redox distribution at that point?
I really wish they had easier way to switch to newer version. It works for me, since it’s not that hard to edit sources.list
(or debian.sources
nowadays), but I don’t get why they don’t make a tool that does a release upgrade like on Ubuntu. Could even list changes made to the sources file during execution for that matter.
Yeah, it was the first version with Unity, but I think Amazon integration was introduced in some later version.
Some random shitty distribution for netbooks.
Then Ubuntu 11.04 and I have very fond memories of it. But now Ubuntu sucks.
Using Debian 13 with KDE currently.
I don’t have a job right now, so yes. Although mostly not more than few hours per week, since I have better things to do, and it have recently started to feel like I am wasting my life when playing them.