

Legendar(il)y shit
Legendar(il)y shit
You can escape Windows, but you can never escape Recall.
I love you, maybe my work laptop will be tolerable now.
It covers the majority of basic things you need your computer to do and it works practically everywhere. If you target POSIX (and you avoid uncommon features that some systems don’t implement), your program will probably run on Linux, macOS, *BSDs, random OSes you’ve never heard of, Windows (with certain setups), maybe your toaster, etc. It has a lot of inertia behind it at this point.
The only really significant Apple project in at least a decade IMO is Apple Silicon. Everything else has either been in limbo forever or is just a minor generational improvement of often questionable quality. Basically, it feels like finance and engineering took precedence over design shortly after Jobs died and everything has stagnated since.
To be clear, he’s not the founder of Ruby, he’s the founder of Rails.
I mean, I don’t think I’d classify someone like that as straight up poor. They’re certainly working class, but if you can afford to survive for a year without work, you’re significantly more well-off than someone living paycheck to paycheck.
I think there’s a small middle class who could survive without working for a year or so, but wouldn’t really be able to live well. Probably mostly just lower level tech workers and so on. Although if they moved to really poor areas in the US they could probably be classified as rich so YMMV I guess.
Disturbed’s got some good music, it’s just very different lol
Some distros are more fragile than others. Stuff like not having the Nvidia drivers installed by default (I’m assuming for the llvmpipe issue) are sometimes discussed in installation guides. IDK if Ubuntu has one since I don’t use it.
Blink-based browsers (like Vivaldi, Chromium, etc.) IMO kind of suck on Linux (or at least Wayland). It’s probably worse with Nvidia cards since Nvidia is still sometimes flaky on Wayland.
The LibreWolf issue is maybe not an issue at all. I’m assuming you mean RAM, and if so, browsers just like to eat as much memory as they’re allowed to eat. If you open up something else and it needs the memory, LibreWolf will likely let go of some of it. There are probably some knobs you can dial in LibreWolf (or Linux kernel settings) if it’s really an issue for some reason.
I only really have issues when I’m trying to set something up that’s not already configured by the distro (or if I’m doing something particularly weird).
Very good C++ development skills
Personally, basically no one I know uses the app stores on windows or macos much. These app stores are actually functional in that they have proprietary apps and allow purchases. There is basically 0 chance Linux will become popular if you can only install things through an app store (especially those that make it hard/impossible to buy proprietary apps). Additionally, desktop Linux is not particularly secure anyway. Flatpaks are helpful here, but most require manual tuning of their sandbox to actually be secure, which the average user is 100% not gonna do. On top of this, what do you do when an app is not available in your curated app store? Do you download it directly online? Do you trust some random repository you find online that can be filled with who knows what at a later point? Or do you just say “oh well sucks to be you I guess?” If you download it directly online, then it may not even have dependency information. If it doesn’t embed dependency information, then it’s basically useless to your average person. It also has the problem you mentioned of someone downloading the wrong executable. Likewise, the other two options are IMO just not viable.
IMO, the only way for a package manager/app store solution to work is:
Basically, it needs to be an iOS/Android situation, with a similarly large company backing it. I should also note that it’s possible to install malware on iOS/Android, just harder, and the scope is usually less severe because of sandboxing.
EDIT: Also, it’s entirely possible to do one-click installs in a “safe” way, by requiring that developers get their apps signed by whoever makes the distro (like macos gatekeeper or whatever it’s called).
EDIT 2: I should also note that just being “different” is enough for people not to use something. If something basic, like the way to install apps, is different enough, people may just decide they don’t like it. My relatives would likely do this, for instance.
Probably more.
EDIT: Something like Lutris should probably be integrated into the OS. Installing non-Steam games is a minor hassle at the moment IMO.
They’re just using company email addresses to determine what tech stack they use. This is like saying “wow a lot of companies use gmail or outlook.” In other words, the sky is blue. This is ignoring that a large number of companies use multiple different tech stacks depending on the internal organization/subsidiary. Meanwhile, proton’s products are basically all half-baked and basically don’t match the equivalent Google/Microsoft suites at all.
I’ve never used them, but if you want streaming, you can use Moonlight/Sunshine. It’d be very cool if a project integrated everything together, so you could choose whether to download the games or stream them from the server.
I still don’t understand how some people find this controversial given how important mobile devices are to people now.
I like how they’re doing shit like this and the bitcoin wallet (that last I checked didn’t even support lightning) instead of, you know, improving stuff people actually care about.
I mean tbf most of these Linux issues are pretty easy to fix/avoid.
I vaguely remember something about some torchlit march (in Bavaria?) and people accusing suckless devs of being Nazis. Also their entire concept is just kind of elitist.
Note that I have no idea if the Nazi claims are true or not.