You mean old Ubuntu?
You mean old Ubuntu?
Call Microsoft about a bug and tell me how well their support works for you.
Pretty well, actually.
Because Windows 10 Support runs out next year.
With the current Windows 11 installer this doesn’t work anymore.
But you can download the ISO, use Rufus to create a USB boot stick and disable all the requirements (account, RAM, TPM, CPU generation) in Rufus’ options. Also lets you auto-deny all telemetry options and create a user account without prompting.
Framework’s choice for display isn’t Linux compatible.
They really should have set the option Make_Discord_Blurry_On_Framework_Laptops
to "false"
in the Linux kernel.
Endeavor and Arch both default to a Wayland session currently.
(Tested yesterday)
I prefer honey cause I’m no goddamn liberal hippie, so it’s important to me that animals were killed for my food.
Can Firefox install websites as web apps?
Sometimes I long back for the times when I just used my computer to do things, instead of forming an opinion about the compression rate of my cursor’s image data.
Is EndeavourOS stable enough for everyday use
Yes, as long as you maintain it.
would restoring home with BackInTime just work
Nothing in EndeavourOS really “just works”. You have to install and configure the stuff you need.
There are replacements that can do the same tasks and offer advantages over Microsoft Office (LibreOffice, Nextcloud Office, Collabora Office, Softmaker Office). Their main issue is that they aren’t what everyone uses.
The other issue is that Microsoft Office itself respects neither the open document standard, nor their own published standard for the .docx format, so it’s literally impossible for anyone outside Microsoft to make a 100% compatible program.
Debian by default ships with 100% FLOSS.
Not anymore. The default installation doesn’t use the Linux-libre kernel and enables non-free firmware.
Unfortunately, the Fediverse shows you everything by default rather than things that you more or less want to
Uh no, that’s a good thing.
I’m forced to use Win 11 at work, for sEcUrItY.
But I’m actually working within a full-screen Debian VM on HyperV until someone with authority tells me to knock it off.
Android is Linux, too.
OP’s pic looks more like he went willingly.
It will reach Slackware about 6 months before the heat death of the universe.
You don’t know what your ISP-provided router does exactly. It may let some traffic through from the outside. It may get an over-the-air firmware update or config change at any time from your ISP. It definitely has well-known, unfixed vulnerabilities.
Also, if you rely on NAT, you have to have 100% trust in all devices that are inside your network.
Thank you for your valuable contribution.
Yes. Now if you use apt to install Firefox or Thunderbird, it will reinstall snap and install the snap versions of those programs.
If you blacklist snap, it’ll throw an error when you try to install Firefox or Thunderbird cause it can’t resolve their “dependencies”.
You’ll have to install those programs from outside of Ubuntu’s repositories, and the list of affected programs is growing.
Ubuntu’s stated goal is to eventually use snap for all userland apps.