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Reported outage on the AAE-1 submarine cable has disrupted #Internet traffic from multiple African countries.@CloudflareRadar shows traffic dropping around 1200 UTC in #Ethiopia 🇪🇹, #Somalia 🇸🇴, and #Tanzania 🇹🇿. https://t.co/mkHaql30EU
— Cloudflare Radar (@CloudflareRadar) June 7, 2022
h/t @DougMadory @gatech_ioda pic.twitter.com/F7TTS2zDdS
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windows is superior in every way. Everyone saying linux is superior is pure poorcel cope. Convince me why this isn't the case.
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Enable the "showdead" option to see the comments
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https://old.reddit.com/r/Clojure/comments/8r1535/carp_clojure_inspired_statically_typed_lisp/
Carp is a programming language designed to work well for interactive and performance sensitive use cases like games, sound synthesis and visualizations.
The key features of Carp are the following:
Automatic and deterministic memory management (no garbage collector or VM)
Inferred static types for great speed and reliability
Ownership tracking enables a functional programming style while still using mutation of cache-friendly data structures under the hood
No hidden performance penalties – allocation and copying are explicit
Straightforward integration with existing C code
Lisp macros, compile time scripting and a helpful REPL
Learn more
The Compiler Manual - how to install and use the compiler
Carp Language Guide - syntax and semantics of the language
Core Docs - documentation for our standard library
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Ticket: https://trac.transmissionbt.com/ticket/3685
The classic GNOMIE meme, "I have no idea what XFCE is or does sorry"
In the old attempt to remove the notifications icons completely, in this time, it would hurt XFCE users
I wish GNOME, Canonical, and everyone else involved would settle on one consistent API for this and stop fricking the app developers over.
Removing it altogether, as you suggest, will hurt XFCE users.
I guess you have to decide if you are a GNOME app, an Ubuntu app, or an XFCE app unfortunately. I'm sorry that this is the case but it wasn't GNOME's fault that Ubuntu has started this fork. And I have no idea what XFCE is or does sorry.
It is my hope that you are a GNOME app. Yes this kind of fragmentation is unfortunate. I'm not happy about it either. Anyway, I just wanted to give you a heads up. Wish you the best.
"It is my hope that you are a GNOME app."
Imagine being the developer for one of the larger desktop environments on the scene, only to have no clue what one of the other larger desktop environments are...
I honestly disagree. If I hadn't looked at some of the other Ubuntu flavors at some point I probably would have no idea what XFCE is.
Smartest Slacker news user.
Maybe for a startup employee or a senior level. For a junior/mid level developer at a large firm transferred from another team, absolutely not. Knowing all alternatives that exist on the market is the job of management, not ICs.
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I deployed a small Go bot here and while there was a few bumps it was very slick.
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It still seems to have an anti-crypto leaning like it did for years, but I still can't fully tell whether it has turned the tide towards pro-crypto or if it's still majority anti-crypto. Thus, I shall make a poll:
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Does this mean the DDG creators are dramapilled?
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Snappy is a compression/decompression library. It does not aim for maximum compression, or compatibility with any other compression library; instead, it aims for very high speeds and reasonable compression. For instance, compared to the fastest mode of zlib, Snappy is an order of magnitude faster for most inputs, but the resulting compressed files are anywhere from 20% to 100% bigger. (For more information, see "Performance", below.)
Snappy has the following properties:
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Fast: Compression speeds at 250 MB/sec and beyond, with no assembler code. See "Performance" below.
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Stable: Over the last few years, Snappy has compressed and decompressed petabytes of data in Google's production environment. The Snappy bitstream format is stable and will not change between versions.
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Robust: The Snappy decompressor is designed not to crash in the face of corrupted or malicious input.
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Free and open source software: Snappy is licensed under a BSD-type license. For more information, see the included COPYING file.
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Snappy has previously been called "Zippy" in some Google presentations and the like.
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Simple, modern, lightweight & fast web-based email client.
Mobile booting with ~144 KB download (using Brotli) and up to 99% performance grade by Lighthouse.
This is a fork of the much appreciated RainLoop, but with massive changes to be compatible with (mobile) browsers in 2020.