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Same here. The only problem is that I "only" have 24Gb of RAM. I wish I could upgrade but it's a hard limit. And keyboard quality seems to have been degrading over the years since 2020. Is this new model good in terms of keyboard?

You can have more than 32GB RAM in T470s (btw. I'm using T480s with 40GB RAM)

https://www.reddit.com/r/thinkpad/comments/bibx3p/t470s_supp...


Yes via the "--system" option of the different commands.

Or via the global "python-preference" option set to "only-system".

Cf https://docs.astral.sh/uv/concepts/python-versions/#adjustin... and https://docs.astral.sh/uv/reference/settings/#python-prefere...


Absolutely. It changed my Python developer life \o/


I would tend to rely on a single tool, do you see advantages to use both?

Do you happen to have discrepancies between both? (e.g. an error raised by one and not the other)


I prefer mypy but sometimes pyright supports new PEPs before mypy, so if you like experimenting with cutting-edge python, you may have to switch time to time.


ruff, then uv, then rye All of them changed my pythonist everyday life, one after another.

Great thanks to all the team.


I had to forbid Happy Tree Friends to my son after he tried... no, just joking


Indeed I can't see the point of shipping the "AI first" feature as a whole editor. It seems to me that it should be a feature of any editor, or else I'd like to be convinced by arguments less marketing oriented than those I see on the home page.


It's likely that they changed the UI in a way that stock VSCode does not allow. Extensions can't modify everything.


Sorry, too late, I'm french.


I tried and just typing letters is slow, they appear ~1 second after typing. Deleting text is slow also. I'm under Linux+Chrome.


This argument sounds to me like security through obscurity [1], the same way some people incriminate emergency evacuation maps of buildings when there is a shooting because they helped attackers find their way inside...

Worldwide shared knowledge versus protection against potential attacks.

> It happens more often than people think

This argument seems to be a strawman, what is the real probability of a wood thief to commit their business, and in particular with the help of that map?

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_through_obscurity


It depends on the location, solid high probability for some areas, specially in the years of the big scam.

I remember three perfectly healthy old lebanon cedars, maybe four, and one... not two, ancient beech vanishing like a poof at night from public parks just in my city in the last years. Trees with soft wood or palms (easy to transplant, not valuable wood) are always respected for some reason. Hard wood ancient trees or old conifers were systematically chopped down in other cities also. Is a pattern easy to follow. Always the same pool of species.

And is not just in the public spaces. I remember also an old Mimosa tree, a cherry tree that I planted and was chopped in the weekend last month, and a lot of trees removed in the river bank in the last ten years under several excuses.

Stealing wood or firewood is serious money and a low risk crime. Most people don't understand how expensive are those things. Or don't bother to say anything when one rare hardwood tree 100 Yo is replaced at night by two tiny 2 Yo, fast growing and cheap as a rat species. For most people all trees are the same green thing. The statistics say that the number of trees in the city increased by 2 and everybody is satisfied.


In the end security always works by making life harder for attackers. Cryptography works by obscuring the private key, you can just try out all possible keys, but that is made so difficult that it’s practically impossible. All bike locks can be broken, but already the weakest will prevent opportunity thefts. Security by obscurity makes sense when you don’t have other means.

I find the parent comment very weird. Wood thieves go into forests, and would probably be deterred by other people living in cities.


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