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I prefer and default to fitgirl, but I’ll admit that sometimes the long unpack time doesn’t seem worth the sometimes only 1-5gb file size difference.
Here to read the internet.
I prefer and default to fitgirl, but I’ll admit that sometimes the long unpack time doesn’t seem worth the sometimes only 1-5gb file size difference.
That looks like for Office? Not Windows?
I mean… that’s a good point. I only make bulk materials, like 1 ton supersaks, and we tend to OVERfill so customers don’t complain, with the target still being close to zero for a whole batch.
Most of our packaging machines require < 1%, target <0.5% variance (both ways). Honestly in practice, over a whole batch the total variance is extremely tiny.
Add to this story the accuracy of a household, not-calibrated scale? Yeah I’d say this seems OK.
I’m so used to it, I was expecting more. “that’s it?” - i thought to myself, in this boring dystopia.
holy crap. I must have read it 3-4 times, STILL found nothing wrong, so I went to the comments. It took this comment train for me to see it, meaning you had to tell me literally what it was.
Human brains are so neat sometimes.
Hi Paul!
Only somewhat related - I “joined” gnu/linux 10 days ago or so, actually moving my main pc to Ubuntu last week (PopOS). Anyway - being as green as I am, I did search for “beginner tips” or “things to do” when installing Ubuntu/Linux.
I was very surprised that publication websites listed “install Chrome”… and it pretty much made me ignore those guides. Linux forums, reddit, etc were fine and what I opted to follow.
I’m you!! Single searching and downloading manually worked good enough if you aren’t like trying to make a library.