It’s a world-depending-on-a-few-large-companies problem
It’s a world-depending-on-a-few-large-companies problem
Install Gentoo and put the package on GURU, it’s really easy (and .ebuild > PKGBUILD)
I kind of understand why it’s forbidden in the axis countries.
That’s not really knowledge I need day to day, lol
I don’t really know, it just looks like a plastic toy your nephew would play with.
Wait, is that a real gun? That looked like a toy to my non-American eyes
The cool thing with Gentoo is that you can just decide one day to switch to systemd and it’s about as easy as changing your profile and updating your system (and maybe recompiling your kernel)
Every systemd-based distro should look like that indeed
Labour is expensive
Oberton I think
I remember not compiling the root filesystem in the kernel on my first Gentoo install, and being surprised it couldn’t mount root at boot.
I switched to sway from i3 about 5 years ago. It’s easier to configure (no /etc/X11 nonsense) and it fixed my screen tearing issue. I’m not much of a gamer, so can’t comment on that. Supertuxkart and browser games work fine.
It’s great. As a Gentoo user I still use it quite often. It helps that Arch has a far larger userbase, so its wiki is a lot bigger. (It also helps the Arch wiki didn’t lose everything 15-ish years ago due to a server hard drive failure)
Our software is officially supported on Windows and Linux. For some reason our chief product uses a Mac, so we support that unofficially. It can be quite a hassle to keep our code compatible on those platforms and Build Bot often gets angry when I open a pull request, but boy is it nice to be able to use whatever OS I like for development!
On a head cheese sandwich. I had to look up the English term because head cheese sounds really weird, we call it hoofdvlees (head meat) or preskop.
I’m afraid that’s from before my time. I’m born in 1996 and didn’t have internet before 2008. I think my first Linux install was Ubuntu 12.04 from a CD-ROM.
But pico did and nano is built to emulate pico.
Belgium, Ghent. We once made international news because students captured the Castle of Counts (Gravensteen), and we still celebrate it every year.
Motorola lets you toggle the flashlight by shaking your phone, I use it a bunch. There’s different motions for the camera and such, but I don’t use those.