Just watching it now (and what a house it is). There's a TV in almost every room, and Fox News is on each of them. He says: "Yes, it is the same station on every television, because that's how the system is designed. It's designed so it'll play the same station all over the house. It happens to be Fox News, but I do flip around. It's not nailed on Fox News, in case you're wondering."
The Purism ones. They work mostly fine - outdated hardware sure, but it is all fast enough and works and is very usable as workstation of course depending on what you do. I do some rust, go, node dev and it works very well when plugged into a larger screen.
mc user for decades here. I spent a long time teaching myself yazi and configuring it just to my liking, only to realize I don't really use a file manager that much anymore. It's hard to compete with shells for efficiency in most scenarios.
I wish I could buy it, but I'm in the unfortunate situation of being in Norway, instead of almost any other European country. Will you ever ship here? ;-(
Gleam seems like such a nice language. The language server integrated in its single-binary toolchain looks nice.
The only unexpected thing I've found is the lack of structs/objects. Instead you only have "enums", which they call custom types, and a "struct" is implemented as an enum with one variant, seen in the article:
pub type Pokemon {
Pokemon(pokedex_number: Int, name: String)
}
I mean sure, why not, except you have to repeat the name ("Pokemon").
Your understanding is correct. It happened to me; someone made a Workspace for a domain name I own, and made a user on that workspace to match an email address I have on that domain, and then used "Sign in with Google" on Dropbox. Luckily I don't use Dropbox, so instead of gaining access to my files there, it just resulted in a new Dropbox account being created.
I noticed all this, of course, because I got email notifications for all of it.
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