

From a non-technical user’s pov kinda true.
But not true at all when you enumerate the actual responsibilities of an OS.


From a non-technical user’s pov kinda true.
But not true at all when you enumerate the actual responsibilities of an OS.


Not really. Today at work that error appeared to me. As a software developer of course I have access to terminal, I use it every day.
I just closed the message and opened the terminal again, and it worked.
This is Microsoft’s fault, not any other’s.


Maybe some people don’t delete the fork after their PR is done.
In my case, I found another explanation.
Sometimes, a random person comes and forks one of my repos. I check their profile, and it’s a techbro student with hundreds of forked repos without any commits. With their bio referencing AI or some shit.
I’m pretty sure these people fork a lot of repos just to pad their CV or something. Make it look like you have a lot of repos. Because when you go to someone’s profile, it is not clear that a repo is a fork instead of their own creation.


Nestlé doesn’t need to be American for you to boycott it though.
They didn’t when 8GB was the norm. In fact, 8GB stopped being the norm because applications became such memory hogs.