It’s not only that. Companies are getting richer and richer and they could easily afford LOTS of employees. Microsoft reached the trillion-dollar market cap and a few days later fired 1900 people
It’s not only that. Companies are getting richer and richer and they could easily afford LOTS of employees. Microsoft reached the trillion-dollar market cap and a few days later fired 1900 people
Still awesome!
Yeah, it’s the classic “works for me” problem
That option did not work for me
THANK YOU. This behavior has been bothering me since it was introduced but I thought there was no solution
Glad to be able to help! Have fun :)
That’s the joke
BSODs
To answer that, you must understand how testing works. Packages first are updated in Sid (unstable), then they go to Testing. At a certain point of the release cycle, Testing stops being updated to become the new Stable version. So basically Testing is not constantly updated. Also, security patches don’t follow this route: instead, they arrive in Sid first (thanks to the maintainers themselves) and then they get into Stable first (by the Debian team) because Stable has the priority. Only after that, they arrive in Testing.
Also see this paragraph from the Debian Wiki regarding security:
Security for testing benefits from the security efforts of the entire project for unstable. However, there is a minimum two-day migration delay, and sometimes security fixes can be held up by transitions. The Security Team helps to move along those transitions holding back important security uploads, but this is not always possible and delays may occur. Especially in the months after a new stable release, when many new versions are uploaded to unstable, security fixes for testing may lag behind.
Also:
Compared to stable and unstable, next-stable testing has the worst security update speed. Don’t prefer testing if security is a concern.
My advice to everyone who wants Debian to be more current is to just run Sid (unstable). It’s always going to be more secure and up-to date than Testing. Also, it works like a rolling-release distro, i.e. the updates are incremental and constant
EDIT: whatever you do, read and follow this guide. apt-listbugs and apt-listchanges especially will save your ass constantly
Anything that has less than 6GB of RAM nowadays it completely useless for normal use. Don’t buy it.
The obvious choice would be Elden Ring. Fantastic game, even for people (like me) who are not fans of soulslike games
man, those screenshots hurt
The hardware is great, though. Have you tried installing LineageOS on your phone? I’m guessing a lot of your issues would disappear
Sony could do wonders with these phones, if only they would market them properly. And yet…
I certainly hope not!
Could someone explain to me the advantage of using snap? I’ve never really got it. Repository systems with dependencies have always served me well and I’ve never felt the need for something else
The Zenfone line will not be discontinued. Asus confirmed it
GUYS, IT’S HAPPENING