I’m also going to push forward Tilda, which has been my preferred one for a while due to how minimal the UI is.
I’m also going to push forward Tilda, which has been my preferred one for a while due to how minimal the UI is.
Yeah - the operating system (or perhaps the display hardware itself, not sure) has to stretch each software pixel to a fractional amount of larger hardware pixels. In the case of upscaling 720p to 1080p, each 720p software pixel has to stretch to 1.33 hardware pixels. This forces blending to occur, which makes the image less sharp.
The worst part of this in my opinion is reading text.
You also lose integer scaling if you need to run a game at common resolutions below 1080p. (720p/800p, etc.)
I mean, sysvinit was just a bunch of root-executed bash scripts. I’m not sure if systemd is really much worse.
Systemd was created to allow parallel initialization, which other init systems lacked. If you want proof that one processor core is slower than one + n, you don’t need to compare init systems to do that.
Is that the official distribution link or a personal mirror?
It’s not built in, but I generally recommend Solid Explorer for that functionality: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=pl.solidexplorer2&hl=en_US&gl=US
I bought a used 2018 model over a new current model because of the lack of physical function keys.
Also, Dell, bring back Fn + Left for Home and Fn + Right for End!
Who looked at a great keyboard layout and decided, “I know! I’ll make this Developer Edition hardware more difficult to develop on!”
I love this feature and use it all the time! Are there any apps I can replace this with?
I’ll take a forehead over a notch.
Mine has also been very reliable.
PNG support lossless compression through deflation, but there are encoders that can apply a lossy filter to the image to make the compression more effective.
PNG doesn’t support lossy compression natively, to be clear.
Rust specializes in making parallel processing secure and approachable, so it’s going get used in problems where parallel processing and efficiency matter.
Rust is also now allowed to be used in the Linux kernel for the same reasons, which is exciting!
Sounds like a job for Ansible. ;-)
Of course! Here’s the documentation for the docker-compose module: https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/community/docker/docker_compose_module.html
It does rely on the recently-made-legacy docker-compose client, so for now it’s still required to install that. If you need some advice or pointers, let me know.
That depends on what you mean by container. I use it to orchestrate Docker containers for my infrastructure and then some.
Getting Keycloak and Headscale working together.
But I did it after three weeks.
I captured my efforts in a set of interdependent Ansible roles so I never have to do it again.