I’m Brazilian and, although I’m not in the hottest area, summer easily hits 40°C, so yeah, 25°C is not perfect, that would be 20°C, but is pretty good still
I tried it out, and it was so cumbersome to install packages that I gave up. I understand its application in servers, but for home computers it’s a pain in the ass
Why are these hard to understand editors still the default on most distros and flavors
I think nano is usually the default nowdays. Nano os pretty minimal and has it’s keybinds always on display so you don’t need to memorize them.
Why haven’t they reinvented themselves with easier to understand shortcuts?
Nothing about vim and alternatives feels intuitive or easy to use
(Neo)vim doesn’t need to reinvent itself to be more accessible, because it does what it does very well. I’m a web dev and have used vscode like anybody else for a long time. I decided to try neovim because vscode was performing badly, but kept me using it because of how good the developer experience is. Once you learned how to use it, there is just nothing better.
but when every other software with keyboard shortcuts agrees on certain easy to remember standards, I don’t quite understand how software that goes against all of that hasn’t been replaced or hasn’t reinvented itself in newer versions
In a way, it has been replaced. Most people will use a user friendly IDE and ignore vim. The thing about vim is that it does things in a fundamentally different way than any other editor, so reinventing itself would mean loosing everything that makes it good, then you better off using something else.
Then again, I have no idea what the difference between vi, vim, emacs, and nano are
Nano is a simple, easy terminal text editor; vi, vim and neovim are three versions of the same quirky and hard, but very good text editor/IDE; emacs is a quirky, but kinda bad editor that has amazingly good extendability.
I recently started exploring wayland and arch, installing a compositor (Hyprland) and module by module as a go. It’s unnecessarily hard but I’m learning a lot from it.
The thing that surprised me the most is the amount of components and projects that are GTK based. I always thought that GTK was a Gnome thing, but it’s very much alive outside it as well.
It’s not a company nor a random strangers responsibility to raise someones kids, and in reference to adults, they can click elsewhere, looking at content online is entirely dependent upon what you search and click.
Although I would generally agree with you, that has nothing to do with the image. This is just a trigger warning, from what I understood, it’s just preventing you from unknowingly accessing disturbing content, not banning it for good.
No, they don’t. Flat earthers don’t believe in a big universe where planets orbits stars and shit, so this image is kind of a straw man, although it’s obviously not serious.
I mean, flat eath is a dumb theory, if I can even call it that, but it is not what is in the image.