Converting a PDF to Excel repeatedly on Adobe by clearing the browsing history each time, saves you hundreds a year.
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A collection of some classic Lemmy memes for your enjoyment
Sister communities
- [email protected] : Star Trek memes, chat and shitposts
- [email protected] : Lemmy Shitposts, anything and everything goes.
- [email protected] : Linux themed memes
- [email protected] : for those who love comic stories.
There should be a class where they force you to install arch Linux without the automated install script and force people to learn how an OS works, or even make them do a Gentoo installation. You only pass it if you get to a fully functioning PC with a web browser and desktop environment
Why stop at Arch? I had to write my own kernel in college let's make everyone do that.
Yes, I'm posting this to point out the silliness of your idea.
I'd argue more in favor of a desktop, web browser & office suite
How did we fail so hard? Where did we go wrong?
You're old
Let's be fair though. Adobe changes the Acrobat interface every two weeks for no reason. PDF has always been an absolute shitshow, super slow, walled garden format. After like 30 years it's still a 30 step process to add a note box with an arrow that looks half decent
Adobe did that to me twice and then I uninstalled it and never gave Adobe another chance. There are plenty of good free pdf editors that I don't need to support such a terrible and greedy company
Recommend me a few. I have Evince & Papers, both the old & new GNOME standards respectfully.
Yea surprise some people are good at using computers some are bad, has nothing to do with whatever generation someone is apart of, generation labels are so dumb. Literally every "milleinal" I've known comes to me for their computer problems.
Not true
Millennials think it's them , because they learned how. Gen X knows, because they wrote it.
Adding to this. HMI's change across time and what feels logical/intuitive/common sense to one demographic, might not to another.
So, the key takeaway is everyone has a different experience, and that is okay.