I think it is https://ziggit.dev/
But it doesn't work for me at the moment as well. But firefox and my internet connection or something in between could be the reason
I think it is https://ziggit.dev/
But it doesn't work for me at the moment as well. But firefox and my internet connection or something in between could be the reason
There is [email protected] but it's pretty empty.
But there is a forum on ziggit.dev that is pretty lively.
They used to cause anxiety in the past as well. But there was a window where - at least I - didn't fear them. Main reason why I still think they are necessary are security patches. But I do fear updates due to their tendency in breaking things.
Why did you need to disable secure boot? To boot from USB?
I am looking forward buying a framework laptop. Still using an ASUS from 2011 but it is getting slow and I am starting to have issues, e.g., my touchpad seems to have broken down.
Because you want to use JavaScript in the browser.
/satire off
😉
I use Neovim, either with kickstarter.vim config or with astronvim.
I used VS Code, but it simply got to slow on my laptop of 12 years age. I therefore started to use helix and got hooked by the ideas of key bindings.
I then heard that Copilot X will / would work on neovim, and I might give it a try in the future I switched to neovim. Although still early I don't regret it at all. I finally understood why people are using it.
That should stop them the next time ;)
Btw, gnome?
Not so much relevant for production use cases but from an educational point of view: whorl is pretty great. One file that explains async runtime basics from top to bottom. The cleverness of doing this in one source code file is remarkable.
I currently use Astro at the moment but have some issues with it. I started to use kickstart, which is not a bundle actually but some kind of minimal configuration. I like it for my personal projects but it doesn't work at all for the C# .NET project from work. Unfortunately I don't have the time nor do I want to invest the time to configure most of the things myself, but I do see a lot of merit in doing so. I personally learned a lot of additional built-in commands and features from "vanilla" neovim by using kickstart that I don't regret it at all for trying out.
Would you say that it was mire time consuming/harder then installing arch on a different machine?