• 4 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • I had a very similar thing happen to me. The oddity was that I had just signed an offer letter with another company the week before and I gave my two weeks notice to my boss, but that message hadn’t traveled up the pipe yet. So my one-on-one with a director was basically

    Director: “Half you team was let go, but your job is safe!” Me: “Cool. You know I’m leaving next week, right?” Director: awkward blank stares

    I really wish I had been laid off. Saved someone else their job and I would have gladly taken that severance pay on the way out the door.





  • Thanks for the detailed answer and pointing me towards the Mr. Chromebox tooling. I picked up the used Acer CB3 for $30 and was able to install the custom UEFI firmware and then install Gallium OS without too much hassle. Like you said, not a fancy machine, but hard to beat that price.





  • js10@reddthat.comtoLinux@lemmy.mlLinux phones
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    1 year ago

    Not having apps like Uber/Lyft is a problem for a lot of people. I’ve ran into issues like going to events (concerts/sporting events) where they expect you to download their app to even get in the door, which is more of a societal problem then a technical one for me. I know some apps can be emulated on Linux phones but I havent played with it much so I’m not sure how well they work.

    I’ve used gnome maps with very degrees of success. Its obviously not on the level of google maps, but getting better.



  • js10@reddthat.comtoLinux@lemmy.mlLinux phones
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    1 year ago

    I started daily driving a PinePhone with Mobian over two years ago, upgraded to a PinePhonePro when they first came out, and then I finally got my Librem5 about a month ago. They have come a long way. The core functions you’d expect from a phone work; calls, texts (SMS and MMS), camera (pictures and video), email, web browsing, all that works perfectly fine on my Librem5. However, I understand they are not for everyone. While there are things like twitter and mastodon clients for Linux you are not going to get a banking app for a Linux phone (for example). I just use the browser for those kinds of things though.




  • Fantastic summary of one of the most universally used cli tool. One thing to add is that the name grep comes from the ed command g/re/p which stands for “global, regular expression, print” since thats what it does; search everything (global) for a given regular expression (even if the “regular expression” is just a specific string to match) and prints it out. Keeping the name origin in mind helps me to remember what it does.