Azure CLI and AzPowershell are somehow so powerful and useful until they fall flat on their face.
hellishharlot
I don't think I will, mostly cause I work on a team of 1 right now which makes my branches wonderfully simple.
There are peer reviewed studies saying otherwise
Apparently not cause it's super easy to find. Searching "docker" on Google returned it as the top result for me. it's a container platform. You have code and it needs somewhere to run. That could be on your computer but that's ineffective at handling package conflicts. So you run it in a container. This means you can install the specific versions of dependencies that the code needs and you're least likely to run into conflicts. You can also run multiple instances of a program regardless of whether it would allow it because each instance runs in its own container. Blissfully unaware of the others
Bad pancake
Some parts of it could be useful for cloud engineering
Somehow I've made it 7 years without messing up a git command that I couldn't fix in like 2 seconds. I primarily use vscode's source controller more featured source controllers like sourcetree feel overly complex and typing out git commands is fine but you spend more time doing that than you would with vscode's approach. I'm really curious about what you mean by fuck up a commit or push
This is why subscriptions are becoming the norm
It's not that dissimilar from the period of unity3d games that all shared pretty much the same effects.
Celebs go on podcasts all the time. A lemmy instance for a podcast or journal would probably work. Similar to other businesses federating
It does if you don't let your boss control every waking minute
Apple music has a sort of halfway point in the form of Radio. Pre-recorded hour or two of actual radio