Thanks, appreciated.
Edit
I assume you mean 1.35gb of network data per day ? As opposed to per minute / per second etc
Thanks, appreciated.
Edit
I assume you mean 1.35gb of network data per day ? As opposed to per minute / per second etc
What’s the hardware and network demand like ? I’ve been vaguely thinking of doing so myself.
Sure but that’s true of any packaging system. The .deb or .rpm you just downloaded off not-a-scammer-honestly.com could just as easily be malware.
That was in 2018…
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/malware-found-in-arch-linux-aur-package-repository/
The AUR has the same risks as adding a ppa to a debian tree install, or downloading an rpm from a website.
If it’s not in the official repository of your repo treat with caution
Not had any run-ins with turnitin I see
Ditto. I’ve literally never had an aur package break my system either, but like you if it doesnt want to play first go, I’ll almost always find an alternative.
Which, again, misses the point. Original OP said “install native” replying OP said “but what about (package)” (obviously intending that to be a gotcha) and I replied with “well it’s in mine”
I have no idea what debs& rpms are available, nor do i care.
And what is this “possibly broken aur” rubbish ? It’s a repository, and it most certainly isn’t broken.
Individual packages may be broken but they can be broken in any repository. Are you saying there’s never been a broken package in a debian repository ? Lol.
Edit to correct “you” to “OP” as you aren’t the original person doing the “whataboutism”
Nope, nothing broke but
Aborting… error: failed to build ‘tuba-0.4.0-0.1’:
and I can’t be arsed troubleshooting why for a package I have no intention of using. LOL
aur is limited to arch based distros only
And rpms are for redhat tree, so ?
OP said
None of the above. Native debs/rpms/whatever for desktops, docker images for servers.
Your example package is readily available in my distro in native was my point. If your distro doesn’t have it then maybe you need to change distros.
Tuba is in the AUR
Your odds of getting caught are extremely low, but if you are you will be deported and have your visa cancelled (as an Aussie our border guards really do suck I’m sorry). I genuinely wouldn’t risk if it you’re moving here. If it was just a holiday and you didn’t care too much about getting banned then sure, but definitely not worth risking a work visa on.
The lowest risk way is to put it on a cloud drive and download it on arrival in Oz.
Both Mullvad and PIA are on AUR for Arch, and they both have .deb packages for debian tree. Mullvad has an .rpm for redhat
Lol. FUD predates the internet.
Someone else linked the wikipedia entry. First coined as an acronym when IBM was protecting its mainframe from competition by Amdahl butthre phrase goes back to the 20s
Edit
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fear,_uncertainty,_and_doubt
I have 70 and 80 year olds running Linux Mint without any problems or support hassles (because their old PCs run like dogs on windows and linux is much lighter on old hardware). It also reduces my (unpaid) support effort to nearly zero over constant windows issues.
There’s a reason it’s one of the most installed desktop linuxes
Install a copy on an old machine, or setup virtual box and try a virtual machine. It even comes with a “try before you buy” mode where if you boot the install USB (you need to create it) you’ll boot into a working copy of Mint so you can just give it a try and make sure it works ok on your PC.
Seriously, it’s very little different to windows - everything you’re likely to want to do is available in a graphical window.
It’s a fairly far-right instance, which makes it unpopular with many left-leaning members of the fediverse
As a centrist I’m not a big fan of the far right. You don’t have to be left wing to think fascism is bad
Liar, I shot first. You were third
Windscribe at $3 per month is slightly cheaper and less dodgy than PIA. I left PIA for Mullvad when Kape bought them. They’re very questionable based on my (then) research.
Something is very wrong here, I’ve literally restored dozens of times with timeshift and never had it go wrong like this.
Restart the timeshift restore sequence checking very carefully the parameters (you dont have to complete, just go back into it). It should show you a list of what it wants to restore (on the second screen iirc) have a look at that for anything strange (like there not being any files listed to restore for example)
My dude I’ve been running Linux for literally 20+ years and I still don’t feel like I know anything.
Carry on bumbling along doing your best, it’s all everyone else is doing.
You’ve got this
Any watch supported by asteroidOS
https://asteroidos.org/