Here’s an exhaustive list of modern replacements:
https://github.com/ibraheemdev/modern-unix/blob/master/README.md
Here’s an exhaustive list of modern replacements:
https://github.com/ibraheemdev/modern-unix/blob/master/README.md
The encryption key is stored remotely and can be retrieved through the Microsoft account
But surely this petition with nearly 400 signatures will convince them there’s a business case for supporting Linux!
This sums up my opinion of the new Assassins Creed. It’s a beautiful world but half the time I can’t actually see anything because I’m either blinded by sunlight or shaded by darkness.
Yep, I’m with you. Project Bluefin is exactly what I want from an OS. My previous Linux experiences had all been awful UX, having to diagnose obscure issues and copy pasting decipherable terminal commands. Until Bluefin, nothing ever worked straight out of the box.
Bluefin’s main issue right now is a lack of good documentation. Like you, I’ve tried to get devcontainers working and they just don’t.
As others have said, not with Linux Mint.
However if you were running an atomic distro such as Aurora, Bazzite, Project Bluefin, or Fedora Silverblue you can “rebase” from one to another.
With an atomic distro all the system files are immutable, you can read them but only the OS can change them. As there’s a clear distinction from user files (anything in /var or /home) the OS can simply replace all the system components with a new distro and re-mount your files.
Possibly because it’s presented how news used to be - a simple statement of fact without embellishment or click bait.
Would you rather:
You won’t BELIEVE how this weapon built by British boffins can yeet hundreds of Russian drones from the sky in seconds
Even that’s more steps than necessary.
Just serve your website with Caddy and it handles certs for you. The config is absolutely trivial compared to Apache, nginx, etc
If you’re truly unaware of why TLS is necessary or how to automate the process then you should probably retire.
Archaic attitudes like yours are precisely why these restrictions are necessary.
Labour aren’t smart though. They believe FPTP gives them an advantage and thus we’re destined to misery under the conservatives as soon as the party gathers together the resources to bribe farage into disbanding reform
That’s honestly fine. Everybody deserves fair representation.
If we’d had PR a decade ago and the disenfranchised had had a voice in parliament then perhaps we never would have been dragged out of the EU.
Boost has user tagging as well.
Only issue is the tag and report dialogs look exactly alike and multiple times I’ve unknowingly clicked report in error. I’m kinda surprised I never got criticised for abusing the report function when all I’ve written is “pro-russia” or “idiot”
What you’re describing aren’t issues with Wayland.
Your complaints are that you’re using old versions and poorly designed software.
Those aren’t Wayland issues they’re poor management and lack of investment
And it sounds like somebody on the kernel team reverse engineered the internals of bit keeper so they would have a clear understanding of precisely how it worked - but more importantly the ways that it didn’t suit their workflow
Fireworks had so much potential as a web design app and they threw it away.
Illustrator and InDesign were too focused on print media and Photoshop could barely comprehend anything unless it was rasterized.
That’s not semantic versioning…
It could be implemented the same as most email clients do. A simple message “load external content” with an option to always load.
Nano is fine. But Micro is a worthwhile upgrade: https://micro-editor.github.io/
What do you do differently? I’ve been on Bluefin for 2 years but still never bothered with dev containers or anything
Using the term “discuss” is just creepy. It’s a piece of software. Do people actually think they’re conversing when they use an LLM?