I used to be, but once I started doing a commit each feature I got in the habit - it's great when you fuck something up and need to see how you did it before
On solo personal projects I'm much worse, because I'm not afraid to rip it apart and put it back together on a whim...I usually go in with a goal, but then I might decide "this design isn't going to work much longer, let's rewrite this", and 8 hours later I've made a bunch of improvements. Maybe even the one I set out to do
When that happens, I do like Minecraft - I give it a name.
And since the people I work with never read commit messages, after I list the changes I remember off the top of my head I sometimes do some creative writing. Sometimes I put my next plans to lay them out, sometimes I write about philosophy, sometimes I go on a rant about specific criticisms of the language or vent about how this was so much harder than it should have been. Occasionally I write a haiku
It's so much easier to keep up with it when you just have fun with it...I just treat it like a reflection exercise
I wish I had known about all these problems with Nvidia's shit on Linux and gone with a new AMD GPU instead of a 3070Ti. I HAD been using AMD/Radeon since the late-00s, I don't know WTF was wrong with me. Nvidia wasn't this bad in the early 2000s. It was the only way to run hardware-accelerated Unreal Tournament on Linux at the time.
Two years ago I made the switch to AMD when I needed to replace my ageing 1060 (still on Windows back then) and I'm so glad I did because I avoid all of the headaches with getting Nvidia to work on Linux
Mine works fine. Never did check which drivers I'm using though. I like the cuda cores for davinci resolve, and dlss for games that struggle on my ultra wide monitor (looking at you, cyberpunk)
If it wasn't for those 2 things I will be gone next card refresh. Truthfully the main reason I went Nvidia in the first place was old habits. ATI/AMD traditionally had no driver support for Linux, or at least worse than Nvidia who actually had an official driver package. Things have changed though.
End user experience is mostly fine. The issues are in how they interact with kernel developers. Or, like, anyone else who doesn't work inside the company. They sniff their own bullshit and expect you to agree that it's a rose.
You can just get an AMD APU and run your PC in hybrid mode. I did that Garuda Linux recently and it was great. Allowed me to finally switch to using Wayland.
They already have Jensen doing his own sound effects at conference presentations. Do we expect him to sell his leather jacket to keep the company afloat, too?
At least you can roll back the drivers on a computer.
It's even more infuriating when a TV manufacturer rolls out an update with "bug fixes and improvements", and you know full well that if they broke ARC again, there is no going back to the old version.
When the marketing department is more important to a company than the customer support. Rather than actually help the customers, they just make sure customer support never says anything bad about their products. Including the problems they have/had in the patch notes.
"These are too many fixes, listing them all will make us look bad."
When the marketing department is more important to a company than the customer support.
The marketing department is easier to integrate with AI. Those stupid customer support folks have to actually think about the problem and determine a working solution, rather than regurgitating a random assembly of buzzwords and spicy graphics.
I bought an old computer to install plex. At one time I wanted to try some tool that does speech to text and decided to install Nvidia drivers to speed the process. I messed up my system and tried for hours to fix it but I gave up. Now I don't have gui.