- Daria
- TNG
- South Park
Now you mention hilarious, have you watched Our RoboCop Remake? https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YyKPJbYTxno
Good for you, I watched RoboCop on my own at around the same age and that acid scene has been forever etched into my mind, and made me avoid gore movies.
Can’t wait for the showdown of Facebook/Twitter LLM vs Lemmy LLM
I hadn’t heard about Organic Maps, but now I just installed it through F-droid.
You have reached the pinnacle of Linux, every other distro you try from now on will seem bland. 🧗🏼
What happens when an immutable OS meets an unstoppable OS?
Sort by Top Six Hours, and they will start showing. !ich_iel@feddit.de shows up frequently there.
Yep that’s all well and good, but what flatpack doesn’t do automatically is clean up unused libs/dependencies, over time you end up with several versions of the same libs. When the apps are upgraded they get the latest version of their dependency and leave the old behind.
10 out of 40 is 25%
10 out of 4000 is 0.25%
Great that you have 4tb on your root partition then by all means use flatpack.
I have 256Gb on my laptop, as I recall I provisioned about 40-50gigs to root.
I should have noted that I’ll compile myself when we are talking about something that should run as a service on a server.
Because it’s easier to use the version that’s in the distro, and why do I need an extra set of libraries filling up my disk.
I see flatpack as a last resort, where I trade disk space for convenience, because you end up with a whole OS worth of flatpack dependencies (10+ GB) on your disk after a few upgrade cycles.
If I can choose between flatpack and distro package, distro wins hands down.
If the choice then is flatpack vs compile your own, I think I’ll generally compile it, but it depends on the circumstances.
I have used Jan Kruegers guide along with Sqouzen and Open Cola to find the correct ratios needed. Jan’s recipe was chosen because its sugar free and skips the step with making sugar syrup, and you end up with 257ml syrup that gives 45l cola.
I’m on the fourth 1/4 scale batch, and weigh everything because its more precise than measuring volume, and that have helped me dial in the correct amounts.
I found that it’s fun it is to tinker with all the ratios in a spreadsheet, while dialing in the recipe to my taste.
And yet without that “critical feature” people have still used Gimp for much more advanced editing.
Gimp has been fine for many tasks for the last 20+ years, yes it’s not Photoshop and may never be a 1:1 replacement.
But I’m sure that has never been the goal.
No problem, it just sounded like you needed help.
To avoid getting advice then you better mark your comment, with rant or something.