I'm familiar with it as extensions, and not completely happy with any - lacking keyboard shortcuts, losing some of my tabs/groups, no synching across devices, multiple backgrounded tabs still running and killing performance and other issues.
I did something similar w/ tmux: map the prefix key to C-a and map CapsLock key to Ctrl (never found real use for it). So Ctrl-a (actually CapsLock-a) is very ergonomically pleasant.
Of course - think about schools with deep pockets compared to those without much; top talent will flock to these, leaving smaller/less wealthy schools. Today athletes weigh a lot of factors when choosing where to attend - academics, athletic program, campus life, etc. If this becomes the norm I suspect we'll see clusters of high talent in "rich" schools. I don't think that will be good for the long run.
An IT automation framework like Ansible (my favorite), Chef, Puppet, Salt. Highly recommended if your work includes doing repetitive remote server tasks or any sort of infrastructure / devops stuff.
Disclaimer - it's neither self hosted nor free (nor very expensive), and I was previously a part of the team that built it. I can honestly say no data is being sold to 3rd parties, as should be expected from a paid service.
Thanks for that - following up on your lead and checking https://www.ubuntu.com/usn/xenial, there seem to have been several unattended security upgrades issued yesterday. We checked several machines' /var/log/dpkg.log and see multiple upgrades around midnight UTC.
SourceTree is a great VCS tool, but why this seemingly basic feature request is ignored for nearly 3 years is beyond me. I'm hoping posting it here will at least get someone from Atlassian to comment on the issue.
The design of this lock is fundamentally bad (too big, many weak joints), and the video shows the designers don't know about the somewhat famous Sheldon Brown method described in the article.
I used the Sheldon Brown method for a while. Nobody stole my bike but I gave up on it after getting a few broken spokes. A rigid lock resting on a relatively weak spoke is asking for trouble.
As a former swimmer, I can say that shaving is not only done for drag. Once shaved and in the water, even while casually swimming in warmup, I would feel as if I'm actually floating better. We'd call the "feel for the water" or something similar. It's hard to describe unless you've experienced it, but I suppose it has something to do with a newly exposed layer of skin in contact with the water.
And, of course, there are also the benefits of less drag and psychological placebo effect.