

Oh and lsp-mode is super opinionated, it does a million things you don’t want or need, so I wouldn’t recommend that.
Oh and lsp-mode is super opinionated, it does a million things you don’t want or need, so I wouldn’t recommend that.
Well, OP mentions he cannot install software on the machine, so I think that already blocks anything depending on lsp.
My experience is mostly from doing linux kernel programming on remote baremetal machines. I use ccls + eglot locally and have fiddled a lot with tramp, which is really good when it does work, but also tends to trip over bad connections.
I’ve also wrote all sorts of elisp hacks to be able to access the remote machine via tramp but have all code navigation commands apply to a local repository replica where the lsp server runs. My use case was similar to OP but the machines were not x86_64, so there wasn’t even any lsp ported.
So yeah, my gut feeling having dealt with similar issues is that it’s not worth it, YMMV.
cscope? ccls? clangd? Surely there’s something there that the other people in the team are using.
That doesn’t really solve his issue because what he wants depends on having servers (lint, lsp) running local to the codebase/machine. Anything with emacs will be a major pain unless it’s a really small project.
I try to remove the extra comma.
Yep, you’re blind to how much worse VR is than anything else, even mobile gaming. But alright, keep pushing new people into this trap, I don’t have any stakes in this.
It’s great that you like VR and want other people to try it. But when someone asks for a recommendation, you can’t just attempt to drag them into your own world like that, c’mon. VR is expensive, cumbersome, needs extra space in the house, has very few games (actual games) worth playing, etc. It’s an amazing immersive technology, yes. But a 30yo that never touched a game before? There’s very little in terms of gaming on any VR platform for them to experience, instead there’s a lot of VRing, which I think misses the point of this thread.
Right, then play the one or two games on it that don’t suck and never touch the thing again.
Young, female.
Don’t get one if you ever intend to travel together and don’t have parents/close friends to leave them with. Cats are amazing but after they develop their little neuroticisms, you’ll never feel comfortable leaving them with strangers.
If you live in a house in anything but the most remote places, keep them locked up otherwise they’ll go missing one day and it’ll break your heart.
Other than that there’s not much that can go wrong, just pick the one you vibe more with and that’s it.
Words of wisdom right here.
Personally, what bothers me about the security field is how quickly it becomes a counterproductive thing. Either by forcing people to keep working on time consuming processes like certifications or mitigation work (e.g. see the state of CVEs in the linux kernel) or simply by pumping out more and more engineers that have never put together a working solution in their lives. Building anything of value is already hard as it is nowadays.
I just block everything that has the words “news” or “meme” in them. That already avoids you 90% of bad news and disgrace.
Yeah, I agree. People are stupid. Let their pets roam around and then come to the internet with an inflammatory “someone shot my cat” post. Of course you’re not being neglectful, it was definetely the imaginary bad neighbour with a gun.
Indeed there are.
Also eating the tips of the leaves and puking on the carpet.