

I usually go for if it has a / its probably US date formate…
We use dots in our Locale
I usually go for if it has a / its probably US date formate…
We use dots in our Locale
Ohh you are in for a treat 🫠
Did you get it to run? I tried it for about a day or so, and only got it kind of working
I tend to disagree, I do have several devices running Linux and with all of them I had issues after install (standby not working, swap partition not recognized, sound only playing on half of the speakers, issues with monitor scaling etc…) Im fine with it and like the journey, but there are still quirks.
Probably Im in an in-between-world where I do have some tricky use-cases, but missing the full know-how to do it…
thing which makes it not normy-usable, are the documentations: for windows issues you can find DAU-conform guides to solve something. Mostly on “official” (with probably too many ads) pages.
For Linux it’s usually a rabbit hole of official documentations (which dont show all the options), forums, reddit pages, where some guy tells another guy to add xyz to the config file…without telling which file and where in the file. Why is this command not listed in the documentation? What does that command actually do?
It has gotten much better, but there’s still some way to go
Unfortunately, the availability of “one time purchase” is not a guarantee anymore as more and more devs have killed existing versions sold with perpetual licences.
What helps a lot for apps with multiple config files:
Probably a bit more polished UX (especially for not too tech-savy people)
but I’d say the biggest difference is integrated multidevice support, either via their cloud or selfhosted…
In some Linux distributions it blocks you from installing system packages via pip, often there are then packages which can be installed via your distros package manager.
With arch for example:
sudo pacman -S python-'package'
Or, as others mentioned using venv.
You should just have received a text with a number on it, could you post that as well please?
Also what a lot of people don’t see ist, that as a company if you are looking for employees, there are a lot of potential workers with adobe experience, much less with affinity (although growing). Not sure how kany you find with professional FOSS tool experience.
So you do have major onboarding costs for each new employee who has to relearn their workflows