Until they remove it from the store.
Until they remove it from the store.
Also, canonical decided to try and solve the same ‘problem’ in a different, equally convoluted way.
Probably depends on how much effort you want to put into it. Probably works in some distros with certain repos, but won’t work out of the box everywhere.
Yeah, but that’s just the kernel. Anything above that (window manager, the utilities that they didn’t outright copy from BSD, apps, …) is basically closed source.
One thing it claimed was the ability to rewrite copy. Basically finally an improvement over spellcheck which has been the same for like 20 years. Would be nice to have something better built into the OS in every text field.
You could also have stuff like suggestions in your terminal when you’re starting to write a command based on what’s in the man pages and the layout of your filesystem.
Valve did some work to support it in steam deck, it’s going to work its way upstream hopefully.
Pretty sure Gaben has a yacht too.
Do you have curl installed?
Oh no, there’s communists involved in my free global collaborative software project!
Still funny that there’s a Microsoft Linux distro. Didn’t think that would ever happen 20 years ago.
My issue is that the only time I use vim or nano it’s because I’m logged into some server where you’re going to be stuck with the defaults anyway. I guess it’s nice on your home machine, but customising a bunch of servers with your personal preferences isn’t really something you can do in most work situations.
Yep, the recommendations at the end of the article are definitely worth following regardless.
You don’t have time to be depressed when you’re trying to fix xorg.conf. (yeah, I know, super dated reference, Linux is actually so good these days I can’t find an equivalent joke).
The reason is probably that too many people got caught liking questionable content through the likes page.
And that costs a fortune compared to what a mass produced new car with a basic open source stack would cost if someone built it.
Yeah, but you can’t keep buying second hand cars. Some brand really needs to start making dumb electric cars (it at least allow you to replace/upgrade the computer easily).
Definitely worked for me.
Good luck finding a new one that doesn’t.
I guess the thinking is that in the past economic growth has been the way governments dealt with paying back debts (or making them look smaller as part of the GDP). Instead of raising taxes or issuing currency to pay back debt, you’d grow the tax base by growing the economy.
MMT is currently challenging this thinking obviously, and the answer to this (as with every other challenge we’re facing, like inequality, pollution, corruption, …) is taxing the rich, not somehow procreating more.
If managed well, a slowly shrinking population can be managed without too much issues and would allow us to live within our planetary means, which are the real contraints on the economy and our survival.
Someone else’s DVD drive