I go out to Keystone Colorado most years to go snowboarding and stay near or on the mountain. There is a pizza joint there called “Pizza on the Run” where I first had it. It’s now a staple for every trip I take out there.
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Pepperoni, jalapenos, and pineapple is the best pie with pineapple as a topping. The spice of the jalapenos pairs very nicely with the sweet pineapple, and pepperoni is just good to boot.
There are definitely use cases where something like C is still the best option because it’s faster. For the most part consumer software it’s unnecessary, but it’s not obsolete for all applications.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Linux Distros Designed for Former Windows Users Are Picking Up Steam | Linux JournalEnglish
0·4 days agoI don’t truly understand things like this. Most DE’s are similar enough to Windows that anyone who’s spent a minute on a computer should be able to intuitively get to a web browser to surf the web. That’s what most people do. Word processing and the likes is tough since most are ingrained in Office, but something like (pukes in mouth) Google sheets is decently popular and good enough for most people.
If you give most someone a computer with a browser and auto updates, they’ll be able to do almost everything they are already doing on Windows with minimal thought.
There are exceptions, but those people suck at Windows already, so it’s a moot point. If you can’t find the start menu in Windows, it doesn’t matter what OS you’re using.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Grindr CEO Says App Will Be “AI-First” and “Not in the Business of Politics”English
79·5 days agoIt’s Grindr, almost everything is in the back end.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•64$ the ticket, 1040$ surcharge.English
441·6 days agoWow, you’re a pleasant person. Just a big bowl of rainbows and sunshine.
You didn’t have to write this comment but you did and you look stupid. All you had to do was nothing. Even a monkey can do that.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•AI-generated code contains more bugs and errors than human outputEnglish
131·9 days agoBlaming AI is in general criticising everything encompassing it, which includes how bad data centers are for the environment. It’s like also recognizing that the crack the crackhead smoked before robbing your house is also bad.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Unsafe Rust: living up to its name
41·14 days agoBad code is bad code. We’ll see more of this as rust is implemented into core software.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Librewolf, Waterfox or something else?English
2·14 days agoThe only reason I stopped using Librewolf is because it has to install from binaries on update and that took a non-igsignificant amount of time on at least Arch.
I didn’t love the extra overhead from the security, but I would do it if it didn’t mean 15 min updates seemingly every couple of days. Maybe I’m an anomaly and was doing something wrong, and I’d love to hear if others have something better, but I just try to adjust my behaviour accordingly.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Linux Kernel Rust Code Sees Its First CVE VulnerabilityEnglish
2413·14 days agoBoone? There are plenty of fan boys out there that are selling rust like AI, or in other words snake oil.
Rust obviously has built in securities that C doesn’t have, but a shitty coder is a shitty coder and bad QC is bad QC. Now we’re seeing the reality of the consequences.
Rust and/or other memory safe® languages are like the future, but hopefully more people are now seeing the cracks. Just look at cloudflare for a prime example.
The text in the picture literally explains it’s in a free roaming environment not influenced by walls or doors.


That’s weird, and sucks you had that experience. I should take a step back and say that I haven’t used a lot of different districts, including Debian. What I have experienced though, was either a star menu like button either in the bottom left, to left, or a floating dock.
I went full in on Arch when I made my permanent switch a couple of years back to make myself really learn more rather than just plug and play. That may be skewing my perspective some. However, I did throw mint on an old laptop that I have to my brother, and I was shocked that everything was exactly ready to go after install. Libre office, browser, other useful tools, updates, etc. I spent more time verifying things than configuring them and just passed it off.
I know that at least when I install kde in Arch, there are a few different build options from fully loaded to no extra apps. Perhaps with Debian there is a similar selection and you grabbed something stripped down rather than fully loaded? I’m not sure, but it’s good to hear this stuff to check my ignorance when discussing this with people.