Want to understand this more. I know I'm talking from a position of privilege, but it's really hard to find a machine these days with less than 16 or 32GB of RAM from the factory.
Even going back several years, DDR4 has been extremely cheap for a long time, and DDR5 is finally closer to general ram prices.
> Want to understand this more. I know I'm talking from a position of privilege, but it's really hard to find a machine these days with less than 16 or 32GB of RAM from the factory.
Okay, but that's worse. Like, there's some argument about whether browsers should display documents vs being an entire operating system with an entire portable execution environment for arbitrary applications... but an email client has no such excuse.
Isn't Geary basically a one-person show? I remember evaluating Geary a couple years ago and it looked like there was only one active developer. I ended up going with Thunderbird + Davmail.
Seems like exactly the wrong time to be sharing something like this with him. Assuming he put any effort at all into studying for the test, it’s easy to read this as saying that effort was wasted. You don’t want to be demotivating him just before one of the most important tests of his life.
A marketable limit order is strictly better: "I'll sell at the best price available, but no more than X% worse than the current price" vs. "I'll sell at literally any price". In most cases, they give identical results, except in certain catastrophic cases where the limit order will save you (e.g., flash crash).