It’s been shady, at least in the past
It’s been shady, at least in the past


Nice! You should put a LICENSE file in your repo with the MIT license inside (Cargo.toml has the license key, but you really should have a file in your repo too)
http://vollkorn-typeface.com/ And I’m surprised that no one mentioned it yet
I don’t like Windows, but the WSL is not bad. OP can’t use that so there’s that
I use alacritty because it’s cross platform and I can share the config


In both these cases,
ddserves no real purpose. It’s purely a superstitious charm trying to ensure safe passage of the data. You can see how silly this is when you replaceddwith the functionally equivalentcat:cat /dev/sda | pv | cat > /dev/sdb
😂
Interesting, though I always use dd on Linux
Because those ISOs are meant to be written directly to a disc or a drive.
However, it seems that Rufus has a dd mode. You can use that instead :)
Cool! Next time, use Balena Etcher instead of Rufus
Edit: I remember for sure that there was a wiki page that said not to use these tools because they modify the image (I think Rufus extracts the image to a FAT FS?).
However, the Ubuntu wiki now reads:
Rufus
Rufus is the tool in Windows that is recommended officially by Ubuntu. A tutorial is available from here.


DuckDuckGo forces TLS while google doesn’t, so you can use IE5 or an old Safari with Google, but not with DDG.


In case OP doesn’t know, if a repo hasn’t got a licence it’s implied it’s licensed under “all rights reserved”, so not open source! You need to https://choosealicense.com
It is a very different product, born as a .NET IDE and not as a code editor
This isn’t related to boot to gecko, right?


Very interesting! Saved
Cool! You could refactor some use of the OS constant with #[cfg] directives.
Are you using the realtime kernel?