The author doesn't mention this as an improvement to git, just showcases that an equivalent feature exists in jj. This is useful to me, a jj noob that was not aware it's possible.
there isn't any. it's just possible in jj, which does not have feature parity with git and probably doesn't aim to have it anytime soon, if ever (not a contributor, so please don't quote me)
It depends on what you mean by "feature parity." jj has some features git doesn't, and git has some features jj doesn't. That's likely to be the case into the future, for sure.
There's also like, some features of git aren't features in jj, but that doesn't mean you can't do that stuff with jj, it just works differently. The index or stashes, for example. In a literal sense, that's not parity, but in a logical sense, it is.
I feel the opposite - so many people prefer KDE, what the hell am I missing?
KDE used to look ugly comparing to Gnome. Now it's fine but still worse.
KDE offers plenty of shiny things that I don't like and need - graphical effects, application menu, widgets.
Most of the time I have a terminal and browser full screen and all I need is cmd key that triggers search and allows me to enter the name of the application I want to run and hit enter. Gnome is much cleaner, simpler and logical to use.
The way I like my KDE is probably very unlike how other people like their KDE.
KDE is extremely customizable. A recent update added a floating taskbar (on a new install - upgraded installs keep the old behavior), like everyone else has. However, you can change it easily, and I even discovered some more customizability I didn't know existed. I can have an icon-only taskbar like Windows, or I can have the full title.
Everything in KDE is like that. You can follow the trends, or stick to the tried and true, or come up with your own style.
> I feel the opposite - so many people prefer KDE, what the hell am I missing?
Many people use their computer for a use case that's not "single application taking up the entire screen.", and KDE works better for them than GNOME. I'm not sure what's hard to understand about that. There's no objectively correct way to use a computer, it's a preference thing.
Hi, when I need to estimate than I'm always adding some margin for unexpected work and this is such a case, especially in projects with lot of legacy code :)
Post Maemo (Nokia N700/N800/N810/N900), MeeGo (Nokia N9, N910) system developed mostly by ex-nokians who left the company after abandoning the MeeGo for Windows Mobile.
The first phone should be ready at the end of this year.