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No its not, the package is literally “htop”.
No its not, the package is literally “htop”.
I think you are mistaken. An example:
https://archlinux.org/packages/core/x86_64/glib2/
https://packages.fedoraproject.org/pkgs/glib2/glib2/
Debian:
https://packages.debian.org/bookworm/libglib2.0-0
https://packages.debian.org/bookworm/libglib2.0-cil
This is the common case, but Debian gets really out there some times.
And I’ll just say dnf
is a much easier to use tool:
dnf install /usr/bin/aprogram
dnf install 'pkgconfig(glib-2.0)'
As a packager I’ll just say Debian is the one with the weird package names. Fedora just matches upstream names generally, similar to Arch.
Fedora will live without red hat. It’s got a community structure in place, all infrastructure is open, etc.
Obviously it would lose some funding and manpower but other distros get by.
A distro has thousands of independent sources. No your distro doesn’t audit them all, barely any.
You can choose folders in the portal now.
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You can just like, say you do. I think a lot of people who check “Christian” in the US have little to no involvement in it beyond saying “thank God” occasionally.
It won’t change anything. Old stories and characters are boring. Studios do it from time to time but like Robinhood movies aren’t great investments and since they don’t own the IP don’t lead to anything else.
Community made content is just for fun, so who cares if people make repetitive fan films, art, games.
TL;DR for anybody worried. systemd-tmpfiles --purge
was too broad in scope (and has a confusing name) so now you must be more specific when using it to avoid accidentally deleting things.
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I tried it after repeatedly reading it was good now. The main change is the servers work. If you disliked the structure or content it’s just more of the same. A few boring npcs were added I guess.
It already detects this and refuses to write to such a partition.
Canonical already maintains security patches for paying customers so they aren’t actually doing any extra work, but putting it behind a subscription gives them an option to start charging more for desktops, gives clear cost for server use, and maybe is marketing for “look at the premium work we do”.
GIMP could fix that today if they just used the filepicker portal. Otherwise once they get to GTK4.
Brightness is very key imo. If your display can’t easily hit 1000nits it won’t be very good.
That works fine. For any GPU task, like encoding, having a second one is great.
In simple usage OpenGL can perform identical to Vulkan. A compositor with little complex rendering won’t change.
Every package has an architecture but you never have to care about it.