Speaking of thwarting piracy, how about Japan stops slaughtering whales and respecting the treaties they have signed first?
Speaking of thwarting piracy, how about Japan stops slaughtering whales and respecting the treaties they have signed first?
But has Tibet reached a comprehensive agreement with China though?
The 90s are calling, they want their UX back.
Funny, the Chinese internets say the same thing… About the Philippino ships.
mindustry. I’ve kinda quit playing games. But still play mindustry on my ipad. :)
It’s quite good actually. Got into one last week in Thailand (during a Grab ride) and I was quite surprised by the quality/finish. It’s on par with all the cheap city cars we have in Europe : Not high-end, basic but not badly made. Enjoyed the USB-C chargers for passengers in the back :P
It’s almost 2024 and we still don’t have any significant open source project for cloud storage privacy.
Users are responsible for their own privacy.
Having Open Source projects providing the tools for that is extremely important. But ultimately the responsibility lies in the users hands. End to End encryption is the way. My files should 100% be encrypted on my side, with private keys that I own and nobody else. :)
Any Asians, specifically Chinese in here with induction stoves to give us a feedback? How does it work with thin steel woks?
You are overthinking this.
The distro you chose is important when you start to do serious things : running a web server, deploying applications for a company, etc.
At your level this is irrelevant. You want to play with Linux, get a taste of it? Install VirtualBox on your PC, create a new VM and install Linux Mint Cinnamon. Is it the best to begin with? Maybe yes, maybe no, who cares, it’s one of the noob friendly distros and it is based on Ubuntu Linux (it’s virtually the same minus some proprietary crap) which has TONS of documentation online, and forums filled with answers to almost any question you can think of. You run into a problem? Paste the error message in Google and a post on the Ubuntu forums will be on the top of the search results.
In one evening, you will have learned how to run and configure Virtualbox (very easy) and install an “easy” Linux distro. And you will have your playground ready.
Now just look around, try the environment. Open a console and start trying some commands. Find yourself a little project that will force you to look under the hood : setting up a basic LAMP webserver for example. That will teach you how to use package repositories to install new software, where the different components of these software end up in the system folders, how to run command lines, etc. Give it a few evenings.
Then pick up two-three other distributions with different Windows Managers and reinstall your VM (or make a new one) with them. To see the differences. Manjaro with KDE. Fedora XFCE. Endeavour i3 (an amazing Arch based distro but with a very steep learning curve. For later).
Just fool around in a VM. Don’t take that seriously. Explore Linux. Give up. Come back to it. Nobody cares, just have fun and try. You won’t know if you like it unless you play with it.
Then if you fall in love replace Windows with your favorite distro and run Windows in a QEMU virtual machine… :P
Same. i3wm first, or XFCE for a “real” DE.
I am currently running a debloated i3wm rig based on EndeavourOS/Arch and I really enjoy the low mental load of a truly minimal desktop. Only luxury I’ve allowed myself is CLI colors. I’m not ready for B&W yet.