Thanks for your feedback around content width. Making GitLab accessible on all screen sizes is important to us given that there are many users out there using HD (720p) screens primarily. Our design indeed has fixed width portrait container enclosing the page body (with maximum size being 1200px) so here's how it looks on a large monitor at 100% zoom: https://i.imgur.com/lTqL6X8.png
Hence if the browser viewport width goes below 1200px, page body ends up taking full width. Although this screen resolution being still widely used, I've opened an issue to discuss this further here https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/49488
Lack of "acceptable high end" Zen 2 laptops is my gripe too. From what I understand, it is following 2 reasons;
1. Intel/nVidia Contracts have OEMs their hands tied (which explains capped GPU in most Zen 2 laptops).
2. Lack of widespread Thunderbolt 3 support on AMD.
While I'm fully bought on reason 1., reason 2. is still hard to digest as one can still ship laptop with USB-C port supporting PD and DisplayPort (w/ alternate mode) and call it a day, and most users won't mind. I hope Zen 3 causes the power shift on laptops.
Just want to thank you for not writing this app in Electron. We need more such examples of using proper desktop app frameworks for writing desktop apps.
I feel RDNA 2, at the very best would prove to be something in between of what Zen+ and Zen 2 was against Intel, so while it may not outperform Nvidia on highest end, it ends up providing an overall better value, leading to people buying over Nvidia.
It is worth noting that unlike, Intel, Nvidia isn't sitting ducks when it comes to GPU innovation so that's a harder hill to climb for AMD. And fortunately AMD now has their cash cow running with Ryzen, EPYC and Consoles so they can allocate more R&D budget for GPU.
These advancements wouldn't matter to someone who just bought a device last year but like Bill Gates once said, it pays off in the long run. So for someone who is upgrading after a few years, they'll notice it, and they'll continue to notice it for next few years before they make another leap.
My only problem with it is performance when you load large repos and occasionally large files because it is an Electron app eventually. I know the extension ecosystem has thrived just because it is Electron but I wish MS worked on a native editor to achieve it.
Pixel 5 is everything Pixel 4 should've been, this is essentially a last year's phone with processor that's also as fast as last year's flagship processor. And none of it is bad in any way, $699 of asking price is appropriate.
What's sad is that Pixel phones even after 5 generations have had at least one tragic flaw which would be a deal breaker for many;
- Pixel 1 - Giant bezels
- Pixel 2 - OLED burn-in and color issues
- Pixel 3 - Gigantic notch
- Pixel 4 - Radar which still isn't proven to be useful, no ultrawide camera.
This is first time that Google made a flagship phone (3a and 4a are still midrange) that doesn't have any obvious flaws, so I hope it changes fate of Pixel line for good.
Yeah right, Maharashtra had massive gathering for Kumbh Mela at Bandra-Worli Sea Link, and Delhi had election rally for Assembly elections and newly appointed CM Arvind Kejriwal had merely days to manage mess left by LG.
Sure now, but Maharashtra has been overflowing since early March when other states where there were no gatherings, didn't have cases. Point is, not single govt alone has failed. Pretty much everyone failed, including citizens like us who forgot precautions in January and February when cases dropped considerably.
I still see public ignoring safety norms like nothing has happened.
As for people running for hospitals, a primary reason (as per a doctor who treated my dad for Covid) is that people are ignoring symptoms for days (over a week at times) after which virus does enough damage that only option they're left with is getting oxygen assistance.
Thanks for your feedback around content width. Making GitLab accessible on all screen sizes is important to us given that there are many users out there using HD (720p) screens primarily. Our design indeed has fixed width portrait container enclosing the page body (with maximum size being 1200px) so here's how it looks on a large monitor at 100% zoom: https://i.imgur.com/lTqL6X8.png
Hence if the browser viewport width goes below 1200px, page body ends up taking full width. Although this screen resolution being still widely used, I've opened an issue to discuss this further here https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/49488
Feel free to add more details to the issue.