

Have you paid for a service that uses AWS though? Youay never know if you’ve funded the big A.
A Literal Cabbage. What do you want from me?
Have you paid for a service that uses AWS though? Youay never know if you’ve funded the big A.
It was built with AI, so articles will scream about it being a triumph of whatever engine made it.
It’s very easy.
Chrome let’s you do “install” websites to home screen, Firefox allows saving shortcuts to home screen.
The annoying thing is that you can’t save them to the app drawer (at least on vanilla android), so if you have a clean home screen you have to sacrifice that.
I used it decades ago (using the CLI installer for a Sid install I eventually fucked up beyond repair) and it was okay for a slightly tech savvy teenager, even then.
I suspect a lot of these issues are down to hardware compatibility more than anything else.
Ditto, I used it on my eepc 701 way back when. I miss that sort of computing experience!
Bunsenlabs is the successor to crunchbang.
Crunchbang was amazing, but it’s sadly no more. Development stopped on it some time in 2015 I think.
Bunsenlabs is a direct successor to it, and should be good on OP’s system.
I love open worlds. I hate crafting. Just let me buy what I need; it feels more immersive to me. Same with games like the Assassin’s Creed series - there’s no way some fake Irish pirate is making leather holsters in his ships bedroom out of rabbit hide and bearskins.
And why does where you swipe down on the notification bar change what’s shown?!
I have to use an iPhone for work and I don’t understand a vast amount of the UI choices - and that’s before data fuckery.
It smacks of elitism, that’s all.
The OS is simply a means to an end. If Linux offers a way to do what they want in a way that is less hassle, and it meets their needs, then that’s a good thing.
customizable and configurable
Whatever you think of OPs proposed use case is definitely falls under the above.
It’s this kind of 1337 h@xor approach to the OS that makes people feel like it’s unapproachable when that’s so far from the reality these days.
Not really - there’s plenty of use cases where running memory intensive stuff like that isn’t an issue and running a small footprint distro makes more sense than, say, a maximalist, fully featured desktop distro.
I’m not trying to run a media centre or play games on my 11 year old MacBook!
Point taken!
I don’t think the lite distros are to blame for performance drops in that case, are they? Unless it’s down to a lack of system optimisation.
Fair enough!
I’ve done some blindingly stupid things with my installs in the past, and I’m not angling to try any in the near future - I guess I’ll just embrace the reinstallation game!
That’s a blast from the past! I used to run #! On my 701…
So if there’s additional repositories does that mean that there is likely to be core functionality which would be broken if it stops being maintained?
I understand the inflation argument, but what gives crypto any value other than a) a relative value which is based on fiat currency anyway and b) the faith of the userbase in it?