One day, after I am done with -insert reason here-, I will have a bad ass, well thought out backup solution.
For some reason you’re “insert reason here” was dropped by lemmy. I guess a sequential less-than/greater-than messes with it.
One day, after I am done with -insert reason here-, I will have a bad ass, well thought out backup solution.
For some reason you’re “insert reason here” was dropped by lemmy. I guess a sequential less-than/greater-than messes with it.
will depend more on whether Ryobi kills off the USB Lithium line like they did the Tek4 line.
This is where learning how to rebuild your own batteries cones in. Nearly all of them use multiple 18650 batteries, which cost about $2 each online.
I’ve rebuilt a few for my power tools. Larger ones cost about $10-$15 to rebuild. And newer batteries have greater capacity too.
Hahaha, so he does!
Please tell me you write opinion pieces for a living, and where I can find them.
Except decaffeinating coffee really messes it up.
Very good point about Agile.
As an end-user (that is, the IT staff that will be deploying/managing things), I prefer less-frequent releases. I’d love to see 1 or 2 releases a year for all software (pipe dream, I know). Once you have a handful of packages, you end up with constant change to manage.
I suspect what we end up with is early adopters embracing the frequent releases, and providing feedback/error reporting, while people like me benefit from them while choosing to upgrade less frequently.
There are about 3 apps that I’m a beta tester for, so even I’m part of that early-adopter group.
“raw dogging the Internet”… I chuckled out loud