Man Microsoft plus was awesome. I used to stare at the foucault pendulum for hours when I was a kid.
Man Microsoft plus was awesome. I used to stare at the foucault pendulum for hours when I was a kid.
I would disagree. I feel xp was the last good windows. After that it all went to shit.
Man i remember. I have 16GB And running windows I would run out of ram so fast. Now on linux, I feel like I am unable to push the usage beyond 8GB in my regular workflow. I also switched to neovim from vscode, Firefox from Chrome and now only when I compile rust does my ram see any usage peaks.
What’s wrong with Wayland? I get the hate for systemd, even though I love it dearly, but I get the hate. But what’s wrong with Wayland? It’s amazing as far as I have used it. I started using with when Fedora 40 shipped plasma 6.
That was the first time I tried Linux with the free and open thing. I didn’t know much back then and when I saw the ads, I was like… Ooohhh this is ad supported crap. Nope… Not at all
Fucking distro kept me away from my spirit penguin for 2 years before I realized it was ubuntu’s fault.
Use whatever fits your use case. Hell build a LFS distro. That’s why it’s YOUR computer.
The penguin is the messiah of freedom.
Thank you so much. This is exactly what I needed
So just replace my old licence file with the GPL?
Can someone help me? I have been licencing my code under BSD2Clause, I wish to switch to gplv3. How do I switch?
Thank you
I love this shit you know. Before Linux, I didn’t know that upgrading could decrease the amount of space it takes. And especially since I have a 512gb ssd only, this feels so good.
Man the last one really hits home. I would transfer all of my github projects for a stable livable job
It’s because we can to an extreme. Extremely lightweight distro. Very nice in containers and vms. One of the most loved ones out there.
Yeah… I love them. Makes my != look like ≠
You did this wearing a proper Gimp suit I presume
Doesn’t arch auto install 32 bit headers on enabling multilib?
I want to disagree. Like I get that installing arch maybe difficult for someone not familiar with the Linux environment, once you install it up and make it sweet looking, for daily use, it’s generally cool. A non tech savvy person is anyways going to be using the browser and office suite mostly, so I install Firefox with uBlock and install Libre office. I also install flatpak and packagekit and they can wasily install software from there, I recommend them to use flathub mostly and I have had only one of my friends machine borked because they read a little bit stuff online and installed stuff from the aur. And the aur borking a system is rare too.
The only prerequisite to giving new users an arch install is that you are there for support.
It’s always a logic bug that you will find the day after you forgot about how the code works.