

I’m not sure about the annotation part but I think spectacle supports that
I’m not sure about the annotation part but I think spectacle supports that
I don’t think so. From my understanding that setting should only change how thick each individual line is though so in total the printer will make more lines
Maybe adjust the line thickness/width or whatever its called?
I didn’t read the article but based on the headline it sounds interesting. I’m just worried about adoption rate but I guess they’ve got to start somewhere
Definitely this. There are so many minor things regarding formatting or how something you wrote may sound off to someone else that you generally won’t know or notice wirhout an outside perspective
Huh, guess I was wrong. I was pretty sure the text part alone was that much
The lack of a good server-side managament software for ebooks keeps astonishing me. I check back ever so often but the recommendations are always the same. It’s either calibre-web, calibre with library on a network share or Kavita.
I’ve seen that audiobookshelf and jellyfin can apparently also handle books but I don’t know how well the support is implemented.
Because I have a very peculiar way of organizing my book collection I need a utility which can export to a specific folder structure and file naming scheme and ideally allows exporting the entire library at once.
wuthout the images obviously
Sounds like pretty much every multiplayer game with Anti-Cheat is horribly designed in that case…
Anti-Cheat software seems to be the last hurdle preventing widespread compatibility with Linux. Even when there is a linux version of an anti-cheat (BattleEye has a Linux version I believe) companies don’t use that and still restrict their game to windows. Looking at you ubisoft and rainbow six siege
Shit breaks but when it does there is a well documented wiki to help you fix it rather than multitude of vaguely related ubuntu forum posts
If you shouldn’t use sensitive information as command line arguments and also avoid environment variables for passwords, how should you pass such data to programs short of setting up a configuration file?
Damn. I have the opposite problem. I make up ideas for projects that I may or may not build and can’t come up with a decent name.
My last project that I actually build was an MQTT based smart planter for integration with homeassistant using an ESP32 MCU. My project name? ESPlanter…
Could you explain the gap in june on your github? /s
Is that the flexiclick system thingt where you can switch out the head?
I’ve been looking at buying that myself when I finally need a drill for myself but I keep being tempted by the 18V version which has the same system but also has battery compatibility with a larger range of their other tools (at a much higher pricepoint…)
I had no idea this was that much of a problem
I never knew there are places where only one of them is available.
Here in germany Bosch Green is the Consumer line while Bosch Blue is the Professional line
I’ve tried this once with divinity original sin 2. With my internet connections slow upload there was unfortunately too much compression going on causing the game to look horrible
I had an app development course in university and probably the most valuable tip our professor gave us was to limit the timeframe for search results to the last year
The Arch-wiki was my main reason for switching to arch. When I used an ubuntu based distro I felt like I had to rely on forum posts to figure out anything whereas with arch everything is documented incredibly well
I’m not honestly. As far as I know SteamOS is based on arch which should give it a massive boost in comparison to other linux distros just from the number of Steam Decks