Yes, someone has.
Yes, someone has.
Living wages in exchange for work.
Not a specific post, but if you browse around there, you’ll find one pretty early.
Thank you very much. It took a lot of practice to learn to do it so well.
Styleforum has plenty. For example, people congratulating each other on thrift store finds or helping each other learn about shoe care.
Retroarch box for your TV?
I agree, but the line is titled “country freedom rank.” Not “media freedom rank.” So the implication goes beyond what may be intended.
“Mostly free” my ass.
Tomorrow Corporation? More like Yesterday Corporation, amirite?
I don’t use apps, I disable JavaScript when I can, and I use non-megacorp web browsers that have granular security settings.
That’s not a complete solution on its own, but it’s a start.
I collect hobbies.
I love seeing folks support the community like this.
“Here’s everything you need to make your own, OR if you can’t make one we’ll sell you one.” Best of both worlds.
Every distro sucks to someone.
I tried Mint on one of my laptops, and it broke as soon as I installed any updates. It also didn’t properly support the laptop’s graphics.
Manjaro installed perfectly and runs flawlessly. No issues.
So, as always, different distros for different computers for different folks.
The best distro? One that he’ll be able to use easily. One that will get him to actually LIKE the experience.
You don’t want to teach him a lesson by giving him a miserable experience.
You want to teach him a lesson that will let you say “I told you so” for the rest of his life.
Manjaro is pretty easy to use and seems to have good hardware compatibility. A variety of Ubuntu flavors also can mimic Windows and work really well.
Haha, I get it. No offense taken.
I don’t disagree. But for better or worse, most people don’t think that much about their software.
Folks like us who do? We can make informed decisions.
Folks who don’t? Canonical’s experiments are probably still better than dealing with Windows 11 or macOS.
You’re not wrong, but there’s also value in exploring different ways to do similar things. That’s what’s great about Linux.
Some of Canonical’s efforts may lead to failure, but that doesn’t mean they are a waste.
I tried installing LXLE - and in spite of multiple attempts, it simply refuses to install the boot files into the boot partition. 🤣
So I suppose it’s getting a different flavor, after all
I appreciate your response. it’s good to know I’m safe running what I know. And cerement gave me some good info so I can learn more about different distros. :)
Thanks for all this info. It’ll help me catch up, I’ll check out your links.
It originally needed a phone number because it was originally a phone texting app.