

What about him? The Wikipedia page seems pretty normal at first glance.
What about him? The Wikipedia page seems pretty normal at first glance.
Yo, @drspod@lemmy.ml, check the article again. Prettier, a very popular extension, heads the list now:
Prettier — Code for VSCode (by prettier) – 955K Installs
Discord Rich Presence for VS Code (by Mark H) – 189K Installs
Rojo — Roblox Studio Sync (by evaera) – 117K Installs
Solidity Compiler (by VSCode Developer) – 1.3K Installs
Claude AI (by Mark H)
Golang Compiler (by Mark H)
ChatGPT Agent for VSCode (by Mark H)
HTML Obfuscator (by Mark H)
Python Obfuscator for VSCode (by Mark H)
Rust Compiler for VSCode (by Mark H)
The best thing about SVN was Trac.
Because in that very particular instance, it goes towards their business model. It helps them sell more games.
Works on Firefox with uBO for me. Maybe javascript configurations?
Something with a Flat structure, that acts as a hub for these projects. We could call it Flathub! ;)
The who now? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_L._Mills ? He passed last year.
Ideally government actions should benefit the society at large. Government is not a company, it’s a community service for the people.
Only after Installieren… seriously though, I don’t know if you can select other installation languages (I think so?), but if not, it can be a non-starter for most. I couldn’t check as the actual purchase site didn’t load at all for me.
+1 for Dillo. Yes, it’s limited, it’s largely abandoned for the past 10 years and you won’t run web apps on it. But it is indeed blazingly fast and very low on resources, like OP requested. I didn’t know NetSurt, thanks for that!
FOSS and Shareware are very different things. It’s easy for Valve to add an option for FOSS projects where the publisher must enter which license is being used (from a list of pre-approved licenses) and a link to the source code including all artwork.
They won’t do it, because they don’t want to become a FOSS rating and distribution service. They make money by selling proprietary software. FOSS goes against their business model.
Microsoft and macro viruses, name a more iconic duo.
It’s still around, Git compatible and all. I have fond memories using it with svn on a small startup as our development hub back in the day.