A short introduction on how to use your desktop system for #MobileLinux development using a nested #phosh session (and without having to compile anything):
https://phosh.mobi/posts/phosh-dev-part-0/
This is planned to have follow up parts, let's see how this works out.
@apples_and_pears Thanks!
One towel down, two to go! From this angle you can see both sides and the reversible nature of this doubleweave pattern.
@Kymberly There are all kinds of practices I put in place to try to catch mistakes. Some I picked up from my collection of weaving books and others I just made up. Maybe I will write up a thread listing them later today.
@apples_and_pears Yes the speed of the Comptometers (for trained operators) meant they only needed to make minor refinements over the decades they sold, mostly changes related to catching errors. I have the first Controlled Key Comptometer as well as one of the last models they made and they are very similar apart from a handful of refinements. Great design overall.
@apples_and_pears Ignoring Comptometer, which went their own way, the rest copied the black/green color scheme and full-key layout basically until the post-WWII era when the aesthetic turned toward military greens, shifting to greys in the 50s/60s.
Technical author, FOSS advocate, public speaker, Linux security & infrastructure geek, author of The Best of Hack and /: Linux Admin Crash Course, Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks and many other books, ex-Linux Journal columnist.