It’s a picture of the people who submit zero value comment spelling fixes to the Linux kernel so they can claim “I’ve submitted X patches to the Linux kernel” for KPIs or resume building
I’m a little teapot 🫖
It’s a picture of the people who submit zero value comment spelling fixes to the Linux kernel so they can claim “I’ve submitted X patches to the Linux kernel” for KPIs or resume building
And as your knowledge tends toward expertise your love of the language approaches zero
Contact your state health/medical ombudsman and or AG. States come down hard on companies that have patterns of behavior like this.
Check your phone’s forum on XDA, there are more unofficial builds of lineage than there are official.
I’m pretty tempted to just buy a steam deck and run yuzu to play my switch games. Between vita3k, yuzu and whatever emulates a 3ds I’m thinking I could consolidate all of my handhelds pretty effectively at this point.
Go read the switch custom firmware guide, everything is explained in detail
It’s still accurate unless your phone mfgr is already enforcing hidden capacity restriction in firmware. Battery tech has improved over the last couple of decades but the fundamentals haven’t changed.
If you want to maintain battery health check to see if your phone maker offers a “battery protection” feature in battery settings. On Samsung devices this limits charge capacity to about 80 or 85% of total capacity (ie you charge from 0 to 85% physical capacity, but the phone reports 0 to 100%.) This reduces charging wear and dramatically extends battery healthspan.
If your mfgr doesn’t offer this feature you can limit charging using the magisk ACC module - I limit all of my devices to 85% max charge this way and my battery wear over the course of a year is something like 2-4% rather than 5-15%.
You’re not wrong. Personally I take a backup of the drive in its factory state and then install Linux - I’m over Windows in general.
Let me introduce you to the fully soldered made in China Thinkpad Z series. Thinkpad is no longer a safe choice without carefully checking the model.
Lots of OEMs now ship Dolby software and drivers preinstalled but without download packages available so you can’t do a clean install without losing features you paid for. ASUS is guilty of this one as well as having other software tied to the factory install ID. It’s always a good idea to take a factory condition backup or the machine before paving it over with a clean windows install.
Let me tell you about the 200 plugins required for my workflow…
I generally don’t, android just isn’t all that conducive to productivity for my uses.
I use my ~11in tablet to read PDFs, highlight documents with a stylus and touch up images in Krita with said stylus. Beyond that I use my laptop.
They’re appearing in Boost on Android.
:duckass:
Edit: but I can’t use them
I buy all of my phones second hand on eBay. I used to use Swappa but now that they’re almost entirely populated by reseller listings there’s no longer a reason to use them, you’ll get better prices on eBay from the same people.
I usually just pick a price target (say, $350-390) and buy whatever OEM I feel like using that generation. Most of the time that’s OnePlus, I’ve owned about 5 of their phones and they tend to have very good community LineageOS support.
eBay buyer protection is your friend here, if there’s anything wrong with the phone that’s not disclosed in the listing you’re entitled to a return at the seller’s expense, or you can let them cut you a partial refund to cover the issue - it’s your choice.
If you’re selective about which phone you buy and check the photos carefully you’ll get exactly what you paid for, if there’s anything wrong just send the phone right back.
The only caveat here is battery wear. With modern fast charging pushing 60W+ into a phone you’re looking at 15-20% battery capacity degradation over 18-24mo so expect the phone to hold less of a charge than a new one would and you won’t be disappointed. Battery replacement is a pain, but not terribly expensive. I’ve had several OnePlus phones repaired by their warranty and service center in the US, it’s fairly priced if you’re just replacing a battery.
I’ve purchased maybe a dozen and a half phones and tablets this way over the last decade and never had any issues. Just know what you’re entitled to by buyer protection and have reasonable expectations re: batteries and there’s no real risk to buying used.
Edit: I’ve found that most “open box” and many “refurbished” phones or tablets are just devices someone had buyer’s remorse over, almost all of my tablets were essentially unused and just missing a stylus or something. Phones tend to have some battery wear but if you’re careful about listing photos they shouldn’t actually be damaged.
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I’d have a field day with that. Max line length 70 or 75, excessively verbose function and variable names, triple the normal amount of comments, extra whitespace wherever possible, tab width 8, etc. The possibilities are endless for that metric.