I would disagree. I feel xp was the last good windows. After that it all went to shit.
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.
This is by far the best explanation
Man Microsoft plus was awesome. I used to stare at the foucault pendulum for hours when I was a kid.