Good advice. Thanks. 🤝
Good advice. Thanks. 🤝
So what is the best way of securing a door without spending thousands?
That’s not just in the U.S. We’re globally breaking one heat record after the other. For a year consecutively now!
Not even one cold record.
Am with you. Their midrange phones still have headphone jacks, though. I like that.
I don’t think that headline will surprise anyone.
I have a prediction for another headline: “2025 could be world’s hottest year as June breaks records”.
TempleOS received mostly “sympathetic” reviews.
😅
Granted.
For a beginner, however, this is a difference that would take some explaining. As you said, some distros heavily theme the desktop environments (DE) before shipping, so in that sense the question is fair.
By extension, of course, I am with you, as with the right amount of work, any distro can run any DE and make it look any way.
I’m sadly certain that this is just the beginning of terrors ahead.
Another example of a company making clear that we don’t truly own the games we play on their platform.
True.
And while we wait we keep our factories running, our cars on the street, our planes in the air, our meat on the tables, our plastic wrapped around everything and keep believing that we will be just fine.
"He looked a little rough,” … “This is a really special little guy,”
There is a lesson in there somewhere…
Or… a cheese volcano.
Get your imagination out of the gutter.
Sorry… couldn’t resist. 😁
This applies to so many things. Someone’s lifestyle might come under attack, someone’s religion might be persecuted, someone has sensitive information to share, and so on and so forth.
To quote directly from the article:
The five plugins are:
I would say it is openSUSE Aeon.
An immutable distro that you install and it “just works”. Applications come in via the onboard Software Manager (using Flatpack). It is almost impossible to break, as the system itself is read-only. If an update should break something, the OS rolls back itself. It can do this, because it’s basically updating what you’ll get after the next reboot, not the running system. If something goes wrong, it reboots to the working version.
Still in development, but super stable.
Edit: spelling
Not mentioned in the article, but I wish there were a (simple) way to get Microsoft Store apps to run on Linux. Some do by jumping through technical hoops, but many don’t.
I mean… this could realistically be made.
Giddy-up!