

kill -9
You gotta learn when it’s time for your thread to yield; you shoulda slept; instead you stepped and now your fate is sealed.
kill -9
You gotta learn when it’s time for your thread to yield; you shoulda slept; instead you stepped and now your fate is sealed.
Anyone else see the back of the chair as the person’s hair in the first two panels?
What’s your area of expertise? In my experience software jobs that pay a livable wage are pretty common, it’s finding one that isn’t miserable work for a terrible company that’s the tricky part.
I thought they gave a pretty good rebuttal in regards to the singular ‘they’. Just because they mentioned a fallacy in the begging doesn’t mean it’s an argument from fallacy.
Unless you’re talking fruit flies, you actually catch more of those with vinegar. They love the stuff.
You can change it to any flag by modifying .config/prideicon/lastselected
so the first line is the absolute path to the image you want (png on Linux, ico on Windows).
I considered adding a menu option to open a prompt to select a custom icon, but I wasn’t sure how many people would want to use it, so I just left it as a configuration file option for now.
Screenshots are a good idea.
I also added a section to the project readme, thanks for the suggestion.
It uses a makefile, you can just type make
while in the pride-system-icon directory.
On Windows you may need to install GNU make first.
You’ll need to have Go installed, I’ve added a vendor
directory to make it easier. The compiled files will be placed in dist/windows/prideicon.exe
and dist/linux/prideicon
Here are the commands to compile without using make:
go build -mod vendor -tags linux -o prideicon
go build -mod vendor -tags windows -ldflags -H=windowsgui -o prideicon.exe
Glad to hear it!
I’m not sure if your name is a reference to the god of Red Dwarf or the yonic pokemon, but either way, cheers.
What if you want it in your system tray?
It’s free and it’s open source software. It can be discussed here.
Some software is more about looking nice than serving a utility.
I learned a lot about the system tray writing it. I think it stands as a decent example for how to add an icon to the system tray.
Nobody needs it, but some people like it.
Last year Windows added a pride icon to the taskbar of some Windows 11 users, and people in the Linux community were having a laugh over the angry reactions, but some Linux-enjoyers mentioned that they’d actually like the option of adding a pride icon. I wrote a simple python script and shared it.
Over the past year multiple people have said they liked the little icon in my system tray, so this year I decided to spruce up the project and make it compatible with Windows. It’s just a silly little aesthetic option for anyone who wants it.
I think the UK still uses pounds for money. Pizza is one of those weird things that is frequently measured in inches even in otherwise metric nations.
Ah, that makes sense. I just knew it was unavailable. Apparently .lan
is fine to use, I think I’ll try that next time.
I don’t get why ‘.local’ isn’t a top level domain for LAN hosts.
We can probably infer by the licensing that he’s cool with it.
What’s Bus Theory?
The glass is also weirdly large considering it looks like it should be at roughly the same distance as the people.