

Yes, both links and lynx are terminal based browsers. I remember using them to browse the Gentoo handbook when trying to do my first install.
Thanks for the nostalgic flashback.
Yes, both links and lynx are terminal based browsers. I remember using them to browse the Gentoo handbook when trying to do my first install.
Thanks for the nostalgic flashback.
I’m sure there are opinions both ways. I think the reason Fedora is the headline is because it is the more recent addition. Lenovo has had an Ubuntu option on some machines for a few years now. Fedora is a fairly recent addition.
I’ve been using vimwiki for a while. My most recent change was to switch it over to md format, and setting it up share data with Obsidian. Most of the note taking still happens in the terminal, but digging through it typically happens in the Obsidian UI.
So far it’s working pretty smoothly.
I am certainly not one of the younger folks and had never seen that before. That is awesome, thank you for sharing.
Good news. After reading the article, it seems like the content and the course will still exist, it is just that Yale has decided that it cant afford to pay ULA’s to support the class.
For those who just want to learn, the course content can still be found here: https://www.edx.org/cs50
I know many sports games a lot of the adverts are imposed digitally before broadcast. I don’t watch a lot of sports, but I would certainly enjoy watching more if there were an option to disable the added adverts.
I use FreeCAD most of the time, but occasionally I’ll also use OpenSCAD. It’s a different way to think about drawings but in certain circumstances it seems easier.
Apparently wiki identifies it as a “pointing stick”.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointing_stick
…also, I find it amusing that the article does use the term clitmouse.