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It’s false that you cannot sell GPL-licensed work.
It’s false that you cannot sell GPL-licensed work.
Busybox was quickly replaced by BSD-licensed Toybox everywhere for that exact reason.
Copyleft licenses (like the Gnu General Public License) mandate that all derivative works remain free.
This is false. It’s perfectly legal to take GPL-licensed work, modify it, and sell it. As long as the work itself does not reach the general public, you don’t need to release it’s source code to the public (e.g. your work for the military, you take money for your work, and provide source code to them, but not release it publicly).
It’s made worse by the fact C++11 made a lot of solutions for the deep problems in the language. As the C++ tradition dictates, the problems themselves are carefully preserved for backward compatibility, the solutions are like a whole different language.
And Lisp is small - the first Google result provides a Lisp interpreter in 117 lines of Python code.
C++ is OVERWHELMINGLY SUPERIOR, if you ask any professional C++ developer.
It was so simple for Google to add desktop mode to Android during Android 5 times. And they even had Android TV as a mouse-oriented hardware. And they could populate Play Store with quality opensource Linux desktop apps, by just organizing the work, there’s currently no technical reason why Krita or Gimp couldn’t be built for Android natively, it’s just that no one cares to do it after Google ignored Android desktop mode for ten years.
Nope. They don’t care about privacy, as long as there’s no lawsuit.
I guess someone could cross-compile a bunch of desktop Linux apps like Gimp or Krita and publish them to Play Store to run on Chromebooks. There was some work on porting Wayland to Android, there’s also X server on Android although it’s unmaintained, and all other libraries like QT and GTK can be cross-compiled with some effort on top of Bionic.
Subway that arrives almost to my office. Yes it’s a bit slower overall, but I can doomscroll my phone for a hour per day instead of rotating the wheel for the same amount of time.
I’ve had problems with KDE on Wayland on Debian 12, it fails when entering sleep mode with multiple monitors. Thankfully, KDE on X is just one package install away, and it works with no bugs.
Debian 12. It just works, except for buggy Wayland, thankfully KDE still supports Xorg.
The first one is a fancy CPU warmer. The second one will play loud noise through your headphones, and setsid
will make sure you can’t stop it with Ctrl-C.
There was a thread about console commands seen in movies or TV, when the actors need to do some ‘hacking’ on camera. And the most common one was just installing updates to your Linux distribution of choice.
My go-to joke is
cat /dev/urandom | pxz | grep haxx
Or if you want to be nasty
setsid sh -c 'cat /dev/urandom | pacat -p'
As for puns, less
command does the same thing as more
on MS-DOS.
No luck eh.
tar c file | pxz > file.tar.xz
Play Store link?
Dump everything into a bowl (except for the wooden mat). Add instant noodles and hot water. Congratulations, you’ve just made ramen!
I’ve used FreeBSD for about a month in 2005, and still can’t stop talking about it.
Cubes are great and render really fast, and you can even have cubes in different colors.
Just do a quick simple
sudo apt-get install task-kde-desktop