![](https://lemmy.cafe/pictrs/image/c9cf79a0-9f7d-4927-95a6-a301529b9b38.webp)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0f761dba-744c-4ba4-a11b-b2256fa9f842.png)
That’s what I did, but I haven’t pushed it into my dotfiles yet (and now I’m without my computer for some time)
Formerly @stepanzak@iusearchlinux.fyi
That’s what I did, but I haven’t pushed it into my dotfiles yet (and now I’m without my computer for some time)
I don’t think I have ADHD but I do it exactly this way.
It was my favorite book when I was like 8 years old.
I use LazyVim and I really like it. It doesn’t try to force too much abstractions on you. It’s basically a bunch of Lazy.nvim configs that you can easily modify without having to overwrite them as a whole. I also really like LazyVim’s extras - preconfigured plugins disabled by default, but enablable via single item in config, or through TUI.
No idea what is it for, but it looks really cool and the art style is awesome.
Oh, you’re right
I think they didn’t get enough support to even vote about that.
I think it’s absolutely fine for software to show support for something political (e.g. supporting Ukraine against Russia), but I agree with the author that it’s not ok to act violently against certain group of users (e.g. wiping Russian PCs). Not because I don’t like the idea of Russian PCs getting wiped, knowing majority of them support the agression against Ukraine, but because they can do the same thing. They will wipe our PCs with theirs NPM packages or whatnot, we will malwarize more of our software to attack them and so on. The end result will be that:
unradicalized Russians will be radicalized because we wiped their PCs (and vice versa)
we can’t use a lot of great software out of fear that it’s authors will wipe our PCs (and vice versa)
I see nothing good coming from this type of cyber war for either side of the conflict, and thus I don’t think we should support it.
I’m now working on wlogout part:
Thanks! The extension is Sidebery. This single extension has changed my browser workflow more than the whole Vivaldi browser that I used before Firefox. I have around 350 tabs open, neatly organized into panels, groups and subgroups. Firefox unloads tabs, so it has (almost) no effect on performance. It’s super-customizable, and integrates with Firefox’s Multi-Account Containers. It also takes snapshots of all of your open tabs for easy backup or migration. The workflow is amazing. I would think that I would spend much time organizing the tabs, but it’s actually much faster than managing the tabs the normal way: I can open 20 tabs in a hurry and when I’m done, just close them all or just collapse them. I can’t recommend it more.
The compositor Niri is absolutely awesome btw, it’s based on infinite horizontal scrolling and I love it so much! Definitely give it a look.
I like it