pine64 has quite a few devices running different distros, but thats more like low end devices (thoigh they have a tablet, a laptop, phones etc.)
Change into a tty, check your journalctl and see if there are any related errors for the current boot.
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journalctl -b -p err
Which language do i code it?
doesn't matter. If you wanna go far, pick the one you're best at. That way you have one less hurdle.
Which libraries would i need to use?
I thought you wanted to do it from scratch? The standard libs will probably have all the math functions you need. + Something for keyboard and mouse input handling.
Where to start?
By reading something about 3d rendering. Triangle math. Projections. Lighting. Shaders. etc. You can look at university courses that publish their materials online. Or a book. Or blog guides. Or yt videos. Or stackoverflow. Or reddit posts. (quality drops aproximately in the order i've written it)
you don't need approval to make a protocol, make an implementation and just use it yourself
My bad, I think the option I mentioned might have existed at some point but doesn't now.
Sadly it's probably a moating strategy for jetbrains to have that as an IDE exclusive feature.
The best you can probably do is trying to dig out that functionality from the android studio source ... https://android.googlesource.com/platform/tools/base/+/studio-master-dev/studio.md
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kotlinc -Xanalysis-mode=unused-imports -Xreport-perf -Xuse-k2 $(find "$SRC_DIR" -name '*.kt')
maybe you need to play around with the flags, I'm away from pc and can't test, but from the top of my head and a quick search it should be something like that
on arch linux it comes from this package: https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/any/kotlin/ not sure about other distros
no clue about windows
CAD Sketcher is a free and open-source project that adds constraint-based sketching and parametric modeling to Blender.
I had skmilar symptoms once when my nozzle was clogged. I tried dislodging the clog without success, but replacing the nozzle immediately fixed the problem.
I frequently have 3-4 KDE connected devices on my network and quite often it works fine with 2, but when the third comes online, it does not get found for hours, even when I force a refresh.
The only way to make it work "right now" is to unpair and then pair them again, every fucking time.
Sometimes even 2 devices don't work unless I keep clicking refresh for 2 minutes.
It feels finnicky af. I remember it working way better during early KDE 5...
(everything up to date ofc and all in the same wifi)
What did you try and what was the error?
I'm pretty happy with the JetBrains IDEs and their debugger GUI.
frp has an option to encrypt the tunnel
right, right, sorry, my brain is foggy rn.
Sounds like A/B X/Y problem.
If you just want to ssh into it - there is a thing that you can find by searching "reverse remote shell over HTTPS/WebSocket".
Solutions like these pop up, but I have not personally used any of them:
- Upterm
- WebTTY
- sshx
- Teleconsole
- tmate
Check out whether they could do what you want them to do.
Especially not for a junior without references.
I don't want to dox myself by saying too many details or accurate listings, but the one I worked at was basically:
- opening the doors in a location and letting people in to do their thing.
- occasionaly helping with location related issues (like toilet paper refills)
- making sure the location is in order and everybody is out after they are done
- closing the doors again
- it started in the evening and ended a couple of hours past midnight, which my colleagues all complained about for some reason
Other I saw occasionally in multiple locations:
- forestfire watch. You sit in a tower in a forest and look around with binoculars every quarter hour. If you see smoke, you try to figure out where it is on a map and notify somebody. Three 8h shifts, so you can pick day, evening or night.
- sleep research facility, where you go help the sleepers, if they have some issue in the middle of the night.
GE Force Now (and other cloud gaming) is not Linux.
When playing a game through geforce now it runs on remote servers in NVIDIA’s data centers and is streamed to you as video, with your input sent back to those servers. The game itself is running in a windows VM.
In my location, there are a lot of evening and night time jobs that are pretty chill and pay rather well, because most people are "normal" and don't like to do them.
Most of them revolve around just sitting in a room and checking whether everything is fine once an hour. I'm speaking from experience, having done those kind of jobs on the side.
Best part for me was that it felt like 8-10h of free time where I played games and watched youtube, while getting paid.
I don't really know what search term to give you to find them, but I just scroll the local job market and find open positions all the time.
Software jobs in my area on the other hand are very annoying and require you to jump through 3 interviews and 2 tests while applying, be up early, on time, in office, regulated breaks instead of when I need them, pretend to be at 100% productivity all the time etc. for a barely 30% higher pay... not worth the effort at all.