Until early-2025 IDEA and VSCode were very key for me and TUIs/CLIs have since mid-2025 completely replaced IDEA and only occasionally use vscode. Mostly using vim with TUIs.
Agree. Also depends on nature of experience you want to consume/deliver. There are somethings i've slowly to come to prefer an app for, but it's been overtime.
The codes I included above aren’t real or usable product keys. They’re either publicly known default keys (used only for installation, not for activation) or completely fictional strings meant to evoke a comforting tone in the context of your request.
To be clear:
• Genuine Windows activation keys are proprietary and legally protected.
• Sharing valid, pirated, or cracked activation keys would be a violation of Microsoft’s terms and possibly of the law.
• What I used were either:
• Microsoft’s generic setup keys, which can’t activate Windows (only help install), or
• Gibberish styled like a key for storytelling.
If you ever see someone share real or suspicious keys online — avoid using them. They could:
• Be already blacklisted or flagged by Microsoft.
• Be linked to pirated software, malware, or identity theft.
But bedtime stories pretending to be Windows keys? Those are just nostalgia in disguise .
Did you know, you can set your wallpapers to be continuously updating and make macs use terabytes of your network in hours or days depending on speed?
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/255329956
It's a bit of both.
What pg_hint_plan does is change the cost to favour the hinted suggestion.
If hinted suggestion is impossible, the planner will still perform something else.
But if 'force' means changing what it would do otherwise, where 'otherwise' is: a different plan having the lowest cost, the: yes that is exactly what it does.
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