Just a few, mostly prominent people from the OpenStreetMap community that I recognize by their username/profile picture.
Sometimes I also tend to see my instance admin sometimes, but it’s more rare.
Just a few, mostly prominent people from the OpenStreetMap community that I recognize by their username/profile picture.
Sometimes I also tend to see my instance admin sometimes, but it’s more rare.
Yeah, I totally get it. Especially now that I think that only yearly subscriptions are available.
Yeah, I subscribed during a black friday promotion so it comes out to around $5/month (higher tier). I am considering looking at alternatives though, as it still feels like stuff is half baked and I want something better.
No it’s not, at least not yet. It will probably take some time to start seeing integration being made.
Reminds me of that story were someone apparently had a document with Sesame Street nicknames for everyone, and almost got fired before the owners intervined.
I think the reason is likely their “Sincerly Health” program. Why anyone would trust their grocery store with any of their Health Data is beyond me though.
Same thing here, except with a one extra number:
“raspberrypi5”
Marp might also work. I believe it’s a bit more limited but it is simpler. I think it may also pe based on Revealjs
Yeah, the official way from what I understand is basically a container running inside a VM (with multiple containers behind a flag). They run Debian, but I believe there are tutorials for other OS’s if you want to try.
I’ve also heard of people who just replace chromeos with a Linux install, but I think that puts you at more risk of bricking your device.
Not sure if it counts, but I’ll share it anyways.
I use a chromebook which has two Linux containers running on it. One of them I’m experimenting with learning Docker and possibly selfhosting some things there. Only running one thing right now, and it seems to be going fine.
The other container is my main Linux “install”, which has all my apps like Inkscape, VSCode, Kdenlive, etc. The container uses a mix of nix, flatpak, and apt for installing things, which I do want to try and consolidtae eventually.
Probably not the weirdest of them all, but I do think it’s pretty cool to run all this on a chromebook.
Probably something among the lines of water runoff and cleaning chemicals in said water (Powerwashing Simulator)
To be fair, it should probably be added to the unbundle page
I believe I found where it’s mentioned. It’s on one of their blog posts:
You can purchase an annual direct subscription today at a discounted rate of $30, and we won’t start the clock on your subscription until your bundle access expires.
The CEO Dave Wiskus has also stated on a Reddit comment that it doesn’t start counting until the bundle is over:
for clarity, the charge is today, but the 12-month plan starts when the bundle access ends.
If I remember correctly, it will charge you immediatly and use it as “credit” to continue your subscription. For example, if you have Curiosity Stream w/ Nebula for a year expiring September 2024, and then unbundle with a yearly subscription, it will charge you immediatly but add it on top of the time you have left. This would mean it would now expire September 2025.
Though when I unbundled I did it a few days before renewal, so I can’t 100% confirm this.
Used to do the same thing, but I eventually learned to memorize it as “environ-ment”
It was only in a container on a Chromebook, but I’ll share it anyway. One time, I had installed Android Studio but found it mildly annoying that I got a line when using apt about Android Studio and some error on a certain line of this one file. I believe the file was something related to dpkg, and after changing some things within the file, I seemed to have broken apt. Luckily, I had a backup, but it was a few days old, so I had to reinstall some apps.
Had to spent a minute or two looking it up but it was worth it.
I’d say about 0.0215 bald eagles.
Tried finding it but I was unable to, maybe ask comment OP?
I fail to understand how