I’m loving KDE’s Neon distro that’s based off Ubuntu. I’ve not had to do much faffing around to get it the way I want it and anyone that has used Windows should be comfortable using it. KDE Plasma feels very polished and streamlined.
On my laptop, I’ve switched to Linux since, despite being built in 2017, doesn’t meet Win 11’s min requirements. This is horseshit, I don’t care how MS explains it or justifies it, there’s nothing wrong with it. I’m sure during development, they realized a 20 year old computer could run Win 11 and decided to make up requirements to force people into buying new PCs.
Anyway, I’m using KDE Neon and I’m loving its ease of use and simplicity. I have barely needed to dive into the terminal to fix anything and KDE Plasma feels very polished and user friendly. To me, it feels like the new “normie-friendly” Linux. And without the horseshit telemetry and Microsoft spying, it’s like a brand new PC.
** Applauds **
Yes! I kept going through SD cards and DietPi was suggested… It’s been rocking for years now.
Yeah, dedicated fingerprint readers were so nice. On-screen readers are slow, require you to look to align your finger, and unreliable since the thumb gets most of the abuse. Also, I usually have to press the power button when taking my phone out of my pocket to wake it up to bother to scan my thumb. Sometimes, I will be perfectly aligned on the reader and nothing happens… Until I pick up my finger and then it activates the reader and scolds me for moving my finger too fast. These are just neat tech demos, one step forward for the tech, but two steps back for functionality.
I’m afraid we’ll never see separate fingerprint readers again since it puts the cost and manufacturing burden on the screen manufacturers.
I seem to be fine on my P8P
National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation and A Christmas Story
@NiaTheCat found the fix. Turns out that I didn’t have English selected as a second language. All I had selected in my profile settings was “undetermined.”
Also, no, this was happening in pretty much every thread and I only have one community blocked in my profile. However, it’s fixed now and I’m very happy!
THAT WAS IT! Thank you so much!
Sorry, I posted an edit above. I’ll copy/paste it so you won’t miss it: It appears if I visit that thread in a browser that I’ve never logged in to, in this case a Chrome guest session, all the comments show up. They then disappear except for the 3 I can see when I actually sign in, lol! WTH! If I then logout, all the comments are visible again!
No, I only have the “Hot Indian Actresses” community blocked since it is a technically SFW community, but I don’t want sexy pictures like that showing up while at work.
I decided to see what Boost sees and it’s the same. 9 comments, currently, but only the aforementioned ones are visible to me. It’s something server level if all three Lemmy viewing options are showing it.
EDIT: I appears if I post that thread in a browser that I’ve never logged in to, in this case a Chrome guest session, all the comments show up. They then disappear except for the 3 I can see when I actually sign in, lol! WTH! If I then logout, all the comments are visible again!
On Connect for Android, same thing. For example, this thread says it has 8 comments, but I only see my comment, the reply, and my reply to the reply: https://lemmy.world/post/9212610
“Undetermined”
Unless it is me, I can ever see all the comments in a thread. This is the most aggravating part of Lemmy.
deleted by creator
God wants you to use it.
I really miss interpreting the vague random words from God. Funnily enough, God via TempleOS was what told me to transition to Linux in the first place!
In 'merica, we love to grab the door and shake it or look through the 2 inch gap to check if it’s occupied 🇺🇲
The mega travel center in the South Eastern US, called Buc-ee’s, does have these indicators. However the last time my family was there, my wife encountered a Karen who was concerned she couldn’t tell which stalls were open and my wife pointed out the red occupied/green unoccupied indicator on the locks and she was like, “No, I don’t know, I’ll wait for someone to leave.”
“They ruined Linux!”