Apples last forever. A little more expensive up front, but I'm using a 4 year old machine now and see no need to replace it. The last one lasted almost 8 years, but that was a bit painful at the end.
@MooingDuck Windows doesn't reboot, it just sleeps. And gets paged out when you don't use it, and actually need the obscene amount of RAM that a modern machine has.
huh... it seems I can, but I have to go into the volume management window thingy and select the HDMI channel... once I have updated form about half a year ago, I will sort that out!
There is a function qual <-> toplevel qual conversion to dispatch to the specialization, and the specialization restore that with a toplevel qual <-> function reverse conversion.
The reason I thought you did that is some time ago we considered if the toplevel qualifiers aliases/metafunction should operate on function qualifiers as well.
Anyway, do you mind if I mention you in a comment?
either I'm supposed to guess the arbitrary string that any given package is registered under, or, it's duplicating the functionality of Google in searching for what I want
searching is not an OS feature, it's a browser feature
@RMartinhoFernandes Very true. But apparently, that was my own fault for not getting the magic string and magically knowing to use the package manager via command line.
@MooingDuck oh, definitely. I use windows the majority of the time myself. It's not because it is a better product though, it's because it's more widely supported.
My old job had no sysadmin, so I decided to set up an internal Wiki. So I popped open Ubuntu's package manager, asked for mediawiki, and boom, there was a slick wiki frontpage. But internal users can't be expected to use markup, so I searched the package manager again and installed a WYSIWYG onto the wiki server. The only CLI involvement was the interactive script that configured it.
@RMartinhoFernandes Another reason to skip Linux. Wayy too many distros. Although, admittedly, I am not on the up and up about the differences, I don't feel keen about reinstalling my OS repeatedly to find out
@CatPlusPlus There is no real argument. He's saying "something" to each argument in order to pretend that he is being reasonable, but there's no actual cognition.
There's so much additional noise in a browser, that a specialized tool like, say, a package manager for packages, or steam/etc for games, is significantly more usable.
@CatPlusPlus or compatible version. If there's 32, 64, 12 distros of linux, windows, mac. Yes, if you know what you're doing it's simple, but it's still not necessary to parse all that extra information.
perhaps I missing something, but to me there is a difference between a package manager and a program that indexes packages and interfaces with a package manager for you
@CatPlusPlus Isn't there more than that though? apt-get accesses the repo and e.g. pulls the package from there (or some underlying tool does that on its behalf, I don't know); dpkg installs them.