They are really good at providing examples for why civilized society needs socialism.
They are really good at providing examples for why civilized society needs socialism.
Consistency with their previous default desktop environment, Unity.
Arch: I need reproducible setups. Also bleeding edge is not for me.
I have to give credit to their documentation though!
What put me off selinux is that the officially documented way of generating a new policy is to run a service unconfined, and then generating the policy from its behaviour. This is backwards on so many levels… In contrast policy-based admission control in kubernetes is a delight to use, and creating new policies is actually doable outside of a lab.
so what are the reasons why it’s a bad daily driver?
Don’t need to go any further than “default user is root.”
Take a machine with Linux preinstalled. Will it run Linux without problems? Yeah, of course.
Take a machine with Windows preinstalled. Will it run Linux without problems? Check the list.
Configure port forwarding for the VM.
In that case gpaste (if you use Gnome). Before that parcellite was my preference, but around the transition to Wayland things broke for me.
Selection buffer.
Unless you mean clipboard manager, in which case it’ll depend on your desktop environment.
It provides a safety net by pooling the resources of the community to support the less fortunate. This prevents people from having to sacrifice their long term goals because their short term needs may not be otherwise met.
Also in contrast to capitalism that treats society as a zero sum game (“I can’t get ahead unless I take something from someone else”) socialism is a benefit multiplier (“I’m part of the community. By making the life of everyone in the community better I’m also improving my own life”).