This sounds a lot like a company I’ve worked at honestly.
This sounds a lot like a company I’ve worked at honestly.
Ah that makes sense
Is there something wrong with beehaw?
Yeah that’s really frustrating
Can you explain what that means, I’m not sure I understand?
I might be misremembering, but I think these are called hot corners and can be turned off either in the settings or in gnome tweaks
The trial is currently going on in Oxford and I think is going pretty well. The primary issue I’ve found is that the infrastructure just isn’t good enough to keep up with this use, and so pedestrians, cyclists, and e-scooter riders are all uncomfortably close together considering their vastly different speeds.
If we improve the infrastructure though, I think they’re great.
BricsCAD is good, but it costs quite a lot. Otherwise the Ondsel fork of FreeCAD is pretty good.
What are the advantages of Zig? I’ve seen lots of people talking about it, but I’m not sure I understand what it supposedly does better.
I imagine it will, as that’s sort of the point of the sovereign tech fund, it’s meant to fund open source projects so that moves like this can happen.
It’s frustrating because there are a few people I like, like John Green, who are on threads but not the rest of the fediverse
I don’t have any advice, but I just wanted to confirm I have the same issue sometimes with my laptop running fedora.
I use a Zenbook 14 (an old one though from 2017) and I’ve not had audio issues on fedora since I made the switch to Linux last year. One thing I do still have issues with is sometimes it fails to sleep/suspend correctly. This isn’t a consistent issue though and it seems to be a gamble on if each update will fix it or make it worse. Still not been a big enough issue to make me stop using Linux.
But yeah to answer your question, I’ve had no audio issues on my Zenbook 14 (other than a slight popping type noise when audio starts playing when I use headphones)
Oh this looks great! Thanks for the suggestion