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University of Utah also has some really excellent free lectures on YouTube. I highly recommend Cem Yuksel's (a professor at university of Utah) channel if you're interested in learning about computer graphics.


I really liked Crow but unfortunately it seems like the project has been abandoned.


If we're talking about this:

https://crowcpp.org

Then the project is pretty active, has multiple commits per week based on its log.


As of today has been doing all what I needed and I found no bugs for my use


It's been picked up by other maintainers



I had similar concerns before getting mine. The build quality is definitely not as high end as a mbp but it's acceptable. I'm happy with it although I do hope they make future versions more sturdy.

The track pad is basically the same story. No real complaints but it could be better.


Open up your browser's debug tools and throw this in to the console `document.addEventListener('mousewheel', function (event) { event.stopPropagation(); });`


I think internet explorer users would disagree with you.


I think internet explorer users should use it for what it is made for… downloading a real web browser


Not really, I just surprise WebGL in IE11 is so much performer than in Chrome and Firefox.


But they can't, because the website doesn't work on IE.


MacBook Pro with Retina


Running Linux?


I know a guy who runs OSX and windows at the same time. He just swipes left to slide windows on and swipes right to get back to OSX. Since Linus uses a macbook for development I assume you can do the same thing with Linux.


I installed vmware fusion to run windows and linux vms on my MBP. It works great and the swiping feature is really slick, allowing me to jump between desktops as needed.


I do it, it works great. I don't run it as my primary OS only because of battery life and software support (e.g. Sketch). But those things are true of Linux in general, not the hardware.


Nice. Out of curiosity, how's the Retina display when booted into Linux? Does it work just as good as when running OS X?


When I got the laptop (back in September), it was pretty awful. No browser on Linux had proper Hi-DPI support, and very few of the desktop environments/toolkits/apps did.

Nowadays, things are much better. Chrome has native Hi-DPI support on Linux, as does Opera (which was actually the first browser to gain really good Hi-DPI support on Linux, fwiw). GNOME has flawless Hi-DPI support throughout GNOME Shell and almost all (if not all) of their apps. i3 does as well for the most part, but some aspects are limited by XOrg. Other desktops (elementary's Pantheon, KDE, et al) have decent to good support and it's improving all the time. Additionally some major apps are gaining solid Hi-DPI support, such as GitHub's Atom. I don't think LibreOffice or the major XUL apps (Firefox, Thunderbird) do yet.


If it does I can't find where to enable it.


Location: Gainesville, FL USA

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: Yes

Technologies: Full Stack Web (but i'm looking to branch out)

Résumé/CV: www.chrisyou.ng (or for pdf www.chrisyou.ng/resume.pdf)

Email: young.c.5690@gmail.com


That's a really good question and one that probably has a different answer for every breach. In this case it's also probably a question that only Slack could answer for you. In regards to the second half of your question, being that they only recently went public about it, I suspect that they most likely did discover it after the fact.


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