

I wouldn’t count on that if I where you. They’re cracking down harder than ever, and they’re getting even more citizens by mistake during their raids than usual.
I’m an autistic and ADHD geek. I’m also an aspiring Linux sysadmin. I love Warframe, The Witcher, forest and ocean facts, cats, and tech. I’m always looking to learn new things. I live by a rule of ‘live and let live’, except when someone is hurting or trying to force their way of life onto others.
I wouldn’t count on that if I where you. They’re cracking down harder than ever, and they’re getting even more citizens by mistake during their raids than usual.
Scanning this thread though, I was kinda hoping there would be one single “Fuck ICE” comment amongst the rest, that was randomly downvoted to oblivion for no apparent reason.
Why???
I’m currently using the handheld edition on my steam deck and I like it much better than steam os. Mainly it’s because I can actually use the aur and not rely on flatpack. It also doesn’t override my tweaks when the os updates.
I’ve not actually tried librewolf, so I can’t give an exhaustive list of differences, but one of the main ones is going to be the UI. Zen has it’s own UI that’s specific to zen and made to be very customizable. Also the librewolf site said ublock is already installed, but isn’t on zen, so you would have to set that up on your own. Plus it looks like the security features for zen are the same as the default Firefox security features, whereas librewolf has some additional security features.
Right, the 1Tb of internal storage and the 1Tb SD card is still really cramped if you play a lot of games
That’s a really good idea!
I played the demo and I really liked what you had so far. I just wished I could have held down a button to dispense those doughnuts versus having to mash it, which was really uncomfortable for me. Also I would like to see the game get steam deck verified.
I think having the story revolve around the developer trying to continuously create bigger and more elaborate obstacles for the button would be the best way to go, with plenty of opportunities for mischief in the process as you’re trying to get through them.
Another thing I would love to see is some Easter eggs like the companion cube from the portal games. Can’t think of anything thing else at the moment, but I’ll keep posting replies as they come to me.
So what do I tell the doctors who can’t care for their patients when I start work today? That it’s their fault leadership chose the software they did? Or do I swallow my pride and put the patients before everything else? Personally, I’m going to choose the latter as the patients wellbeing comes before my opinions about my hospitals choice in software.
While I get your point on the over reliance on Microsoft, some of us are going to be stuck spending the whole day trying to fix this shit. You could show some compassion.
Unfortunately, if you did this, it would be the shop that sold you it that takes the hit, because you have to go to them to get the refund, not the original manufacturer.
Couldn’t you just buy a new tv of a different brand from the same shop to offset the hit from the refund?
I can’t remember what I did to break it, but back when I was in high school I was tinkering right before class and rendered my laptop unbootable. I booted into an Arch Linux USB, chrooted into my install, found the config file I messed with, then reverted it. I booted back into my system and started the bell ringer assignment as quickly as I could. I had one minute left when the teacher walks by, looks at it, and says that I did a really good job. She never knew my laptop was unbootable just 2 minutes earlier.
I find it useful for learning once you get the fundamentals down. I do it by trying to find all the bugs in the generated code, then see what could be cut out or restructured. It really gives more insight into how things actually work than just regular coding alone.
This isn’t as useful for coding actual programs though, since it would just take more time than necessary.