Makes sense, thanks.
Makes sense, thanks.
New to Linux: in which case would you stick with an “old-old-stable” release?
Software incompatibility?
At first glance the difference in width comes from the front wings, which protruded beyond the wheels in the '22 cars.
So hopefully the wings last longer in wheel to wheel action.
restricting the total amount used and basically anything else makes more sense
Oh you meant eliminate the flow limit, I thought you meant eliminate the fuel itself. And I agree (with the caveat you said, also limiting the total amount).
That won’t happen for 15 years at least, only Formula E can be fully electric.
With an FIA exclusivity deal through 2039 to be the sole EV single-seat series on the FIA menu, Formula E has plenty of time to grow.
The band played 2 early albums + their latest one in sequence. Listening to whole albums in one go was great for many reasons.
Fellow PT-PT ISO user here. And although I use PT-PT in the OS, both my mechanical keyboards’ physical layout is DE ISO, which has most special symbols in the same place. (finding DE keyboards is easier)
I’ve considered switching to UK ISO before. Typing brackets “[] {}
” and a semicolon “;
” is harder in PT-PT.
Especially the curly brackets {}
, which are really awkward to type with my small hands.
One that is written in C and also has a Python module: https://aubio.org/
Not a fan of datalist
:
select
:Somewhat liked Chrome’s implementation in Android:
I’m running a 6700XT and weirdly enough it pre-compiled in Linux but not in Windows.
It’s really stuttery for a while in Windows, with low GPU usage and erratic frequency, until it normalizes.
I’m getting none of that in Linux, smooth from the start in-game. Only getting some weird fps fluctuation in the start menu.
Makes sense, thank you for the clarification.
It is also a file browser.
And apparently also supports FTP/SFTP, quite nifty.
I’m new-ish to Linux and new to Debian, but I literally just did a (second) Debian 12 install, so I have one note about your Firefox’s documentation, specifically about “chromium’s suggestion” when uninstalling Firefox. https://makedebianfunagainandlearnhowtodoothercoolstufftoo.computer/doku.php?id=start:firefoxesr
Besides Firefox ESR, it came bundled with “Konqueror”. Don’t know if it depends on your installation’s configuration, though. I selected to install “non-free” software, if it helps. So for me it didn’t complain when I uninstalled Firefox ESR, it just set Konqueror as the default web browser
From the F1 channel, here it is in action (shakedown test).
I don’t know if we’re discussing semantics. A performance score is attributed, and before the fix their scores were all 166. It doesn’t work, as you said. So the consequence is the preferred core being “random”, isn’t it?
Apparently there’s a bug in an AMD’s driver. It was supposed to assign processes based on each core’s self reported performance, but because of the bug it was random.
This “self reported performance” is based on evaluation done to the cores in the fab process, by AMD. Meaning, due to imperfections some cores are a bit better than others.
I remember having some issue like that, but I’m not sure if this was the fix.
Try unchecking “Show desktop notifications when the song changes” on Spotify’s settings (right now it’s under the Display section).