“I do not worship what you worship, nor do you worship what I worship. I do not venerate what you venerate, nor do you venerate what I venerate.”

“You will pay dearly, you will pay everything.”

“The moving finger writes; and, having writ, moves on: nor all thy piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel half a line, nor all thy tears wash out a word of it.”

“Smile and the world smiles with you, cry and you cry alone.”

“I would rather die on my feet than live on my knees.”

“Better to be a number than the number one like many.”

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Cake day: March 17th, 2025

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  • Better safe than sorry.

    Also, from what i just read, he seems to be playing dumb in some of his answers, while also repeatedly ignoring important questions and closing the issue because “too heated”.

    In one issue (from 3 days ago) he also asks, kinda angry, if people want to see the chat he had with the previous maintainer before receiving ownership of the repo, but in the next comments he says he didn’t save that chat as screenshots.

    Like… WUT??

    I started reading thinking it was just people being too cautious, but now I’m sure the guy is full of shit and I would expect the worse to have happened here, honestly.







  • I don’t think that currently there is much difference in terms of performance, unless you are using a very bloated distro.

    Personally I prefer Arch compared to Ubuntu, Fedora or similar (including Endeavor, Manjaro etc…) because I simply want to build my OS, piece by piece.

    There is basically nothing else about it, I just like feeling the system I am running as something I created (kinda) and knowing exactly what is running and why it’s there.

    Obviously you could achieve the same with other distros (and even go deeper with things like Gentoo or Guix) but Arch makes it very easy to do it.

    EDIT: oh and being rolling release too, as another user mentioned. I would never go back to a fixed release distro.







  • When was that epic photo taken?

    EDIT: did my own research

    Jun 18, 2012 3:29 PM

    Linus Torvalds Gives Nvidia the Finger. Literally.

    Linux creator Linus Torvalds isn’t happy with Nvidia. And he wants you to know it.

    Late last week, at a hacker meetup in Finland, Torvalds laid into Nvidia, calling it “the single worst company” the Linux developer community has ever dealt with, complaining that the chipmaker doesn’t do as much as it could to ensure that its hardware plays nicely with his open source operating system. He even turned to the camera filming the event, flipped the company the proverbial bird, and dropped the proverbial F bomb.

    Absolute fucking legend!



  • Windows 10 died a few days ago, leaving users with three options: stick with the OS, upgrade to Windows 11, or switch to an entirely different platform like macOS or GNU/Linux. But months before Microsoft dropped support for the OS, Linux-focused companies were already campaigning to poach Microsoft customers and convert them into Linux users.

    The Document Foundation, the folks behind LibreOffice, started its push as far back as June this year, criticizing Microsoft’s decision to end support, which would render millions of perfectly functional PCs obsolete, and presented Linux as a cost-effective and secure alternative. We have also seen initiatives like The “End of 10” Campaign by KDE, making the case for Linux and providing guides and info on how to switch.

    Of all the projects trying to poach Windows users, Zorin Group might be the most aggressive, launching its biggest OS upgrade, Zorin OS 18, on the very day Windows 10 died.

    In a recent post on X, Zorin Group celebrated the launch of version 18, claiming that it hit 100,000 downloads in “a little over 2 days”. The company called it its “biggest launch ever” and claimed that over 72% of those downloads came from Windows.

    Zorin OS 18 just reached 100,000 downloads in a little over 2 days 🎉️

    Over 72% of these downloads came from Windows, reflecting our mission to provide a better alternative to the incumbent operating systems from Big Tech.

    Thank you for making this our biggest launch ever! pic.twitter.com/6U4h3EQ3dq — Zorin OS (@ZorinOS) October 16, 2025

    So what’s the big deal with Zorin OS 18? The new version comes with a redesigned desktop that feels a lot more modern. It uses a lighter color palette and a taskbar that has a floating, rounded style by default. The developers also introduced a much better window tiling system. If you drag a window to the top of the screen, a layout manager pops up, similar to Windows 11’s Snap Layouts. The main difference here is that Zorin allows you to create your own custom tiling layouts.

    As for Windows app compatibility, Zorin OS 18 now includes an updated version of WINE 10 for better support of Windows software. On top of that, there’s also an expanded database that helps when it detects a Windows installer. The system checks the file and suggests the best way to run over 170 popular apps, whether that means installing a native Linux version, using the web-based alternative, or firing it up through WINE.