

I’m sorry, Dave
I’m sorry, Dave
Thanks for the response. Seems like I made a good choice by going with the AGPL
Dumb question because I’m not fluent in License-Lore: which license would be best at preventing others (or me from the future) from selling / closing down the licensed work? Would it be GPL, AGPL, MPL, something else?
Codeberg is awesome, it’s just like github but open source and self-hostable (forgejo)
That’s the neat part: you don’t have to take the icky parts. Just use artix instead of arch to not use systemd
Debain on servers because it just works.
Arch on desktops because you got basically every software package you’d ever need in the AUR and it’s somewhat stable.
yes, we are quite good at funding foss
are you trying to say that this is a bad thing?
Doesn’t Firefox use GCM? I think fdroid doesn’t allow apps that use that
ya don’t have to enter your sudo password if you’re already logged in as root
Dell - best known for good-quality mass-produced PCs -
I’d disagree with the “good-quality” part, but they certainly are mass-produced
But what if I want to snort Wiesnkoks off of a dick?
adafruit is using cloudflare and it automatically loads stuff from paypal, amazon and cloudfront. it will also ship your stuff using dhl, ups etc.
would you say that you trust all of those companies with your (meta)data? if yes, reCAPTCHA won’t make a difference. although i do agree that everyone should use hCaptcha
i can’t believe so many people didn’t get that part
ventoy but instead of it being installed on a usb stick it is set up as a PXE Server, which then serves boot images over the network to your clients that you want to install
Oh I thought you meant separate mouse-buttons. I still think tap-to-click is superior, but as always: if you like to click then go and configure your system to click
Yeah I love moving my finger away from the middle of the touchpad and down to the clicky-thingy just to then move it back to the middle of the touchpad. I think tap-to-click is just faster while having no real disadvantages
If you’re arguing for ease of use: they’re pretty much on a par with each other. If you’re arguing for ease of software installation I’d prefer Ubuntu over fedora, as Ubuntu is still the first linux distro any proprietary software company will port their software to (even though it’s gotten better over the last few years), which is probably the only thing the average user cares about: does my software run or not?
Okay, but what is “overrated” about them? I don’t like Ubuntu either, but I don’t think it’s overrated. It just is where it is
I guess you could also Mount a tmpfs to that directory