I think tailwind is like a drug for css developers which gives them power but takes something away. They've successfully convinced people to think the tailwind way and not beyond to the extent that we use absurd classes to keep overselves in html. It's cleaver but not simple. I still miss the days when I was able to quickly turn a design into html but now I struggle and search for my tailwind drug.
> In the future, we’ll build and sell services on top of our tools — but the tools themselves will remain free and open-source.
> Our plan is to provide paid services that are better and easier to use than the alternatives by integrating our open-source offerings directly. Our goal is for these services to be as impactful as Ruff itself — but you may choose not to use them. Either way, Ruff will remain free and open-source, just as it is today.
As another data point, I've a tendency to not store too many photos and messages for long term. I think thats the reason why my 7 plus is still running like new after all these years. The only reason I'll upgrade will be 5G.
I do that too, recently for the first time enabled cloud sync (had a 1 TB of OneDrive storage sitting unused anyway), so most photos delete themselves from the phone eventually. But that's compensating for tech deficiency, though.
What is the point of me having 256 GB of storage on the phone, if the phone starts slowing down wholesale once I take 50% of it? I get that there needs to be some buffer for swap and flash magic and whatnot, but I'd thought it would be closer to PC / Windows, where everything is fine until ~90% storage being used.
That's on top of bloated software doing background magic. Can't speak for other phones and brands, but my experience with Samsung flagships (S4, S7, wife's S9, now S22) is that the camera and gallery app are bloated, and their performance degrades rapidly with the amount of photos you take - around 50% worth of storage is when camera starts having delays on the order of seconds, interfering with its core purpose of taking photos.
(And it's not that it couldn't be better - Samsung just isn't investing effort in making core system apps performant enough. It's hard to find efficient apps these days on the Play Store, but there are rare exceptions, like e.g. Aves gallery, which is FLOSS and manages to be leaner, faster and significantly more feature-full than just about anything else, stock or third-party.)
Since past few years, I am able to trigger a sensation at my will which is so pleasant that it's addictive. I looked for some medical phenomena and found ASMR (autonomous sensory meridian response). My experience differs from ASMR as mine begins in the opposite direction of ASMR and is like a continuous flow.
The KAP has very similar description of Kundalini. At this point I am confused.
If there's a strong sexual or electrical feeling to the sensation, if it emanates from the base of the spine, moves within (or just in front of) the spine, or in the centre of your head you may want to look into yogic and meditative practices (including KAP).
Perhaps the descriptions in this AYP lesson [1] will resonate with you. I've found their forum very helpful for answering questions.
That and the details in link indeed resonate with me. This practice helps me focus and relax so that's good enough for me. It goes away when my brain is clogged with thoughts and comes back when I clear everything. I'll have a look at these practices to learn more. Thanks
> Yes, I am based on GPT-3 language model that was created by Open AI. However, I have been fine-tuned and customized specifically for the BharatGPT platform by the developers at GMS Productions to enhance my performance and make me more useful to users like you.
Does (neo)vim offer a similar debugging experience? Visually stepping through code and setting break points and stuff?
I like vim's code navigation, but I miss the autocompletion features of bigger editors. Can you make vim tab complete like sublime? Last I tried, it was never as "one key to rule them all", but required some additional finger-fu and attention. Also moving selected code around (so I can make engine noises) is a must.
Something about VS Code just feels wrong, but it's pretty much exactly enough of an "IDE" for me. Tho, I strongly dislike the project based file management. Would like to have a solid vim setup instead.