So
I have a CSV file
I open Google Sheets
I choose "Import"
I drag in my CSV, I tell it to separate by comma and go
It chugs for a while
Nothing happens, just literally nothing, and I do not get an error.
Hm.
Are there any better ways to locally view a CSV in grid/spreadsheet format in modern Linux than libreoffice calc?
@GossiTheDog I'd've applied if not for (a) a cross-country commute that they won't pay for, (b) the lack of even one day off, and (c) the unrealistic deadline to "completion" - and I've done 80-hour weeks, six days a week, for five weeks straight for far far less.
CyberJanitors deserve better than $21k in a town where a night's rest can run $250 - especially when your client's the one with the beds, showers, food, drink, and so on.
hey so if you're sitting on shells inside of malware bytes, this giant shakeup thats happening there is a good time to do all your lateral movement and exfil.
sorry for anyone reading this who works/worked there - its shitty and awkward for you, but that wont stop attackers from doing their thing.
and using "the av solution" to push malware/ransomware to customers is ABSOLUTELY A THING.
so.. keep an eye out.
(also, think about us, we can help phobos.io/rtg)
I'm trying to print something, but it's not sized for letter-paper, which is in my printer. So if I let it get natively scaled, it ends up printing too close to the edge of the paper and cropping off some vital info.
so I have to resize the paper (but not the contents). The only tool I have that seems to be able to do this has to split it into 3 separate files, since it's 3 pages. Fine.
so I print them seprately.
@nixCraft It's an "enterprise distro" only if you're running the Linux Subsystem on Windows Enterprise - otherwise it's just another "Linux on the Desktop".
@nixCraft “And, Lo!, Microsoft begat Explorer and Mozilla begat Firefox, and they were good enough. KDE begat KHTML, and KHTML begat Konqueror, and they were good. And Apple did take KHTML and begat WebKit and Safari, and Safari was good. And Google did take WebKit and begat Chrome, and Chrome was good. And Microsoft then slaid Explorer to take WebKit, and thus begat Edge. And Chrome and Edge did multiply, and it was a time of much sadness and RAM usage…”
@Viss Windows 11, 8, and Vista all managed to instill in users a strong desire to revert to their predecessors and an equally strong desire to skip to their successors.