outliving all of the variables
So, is SUSE not doing a traditional Linux distro anymore? I’m not really understanding this ALP move.
You could include pass. It is a password manager that is primarily terminal-based, but because it uses standard GPG encrypted files to do so, they are viewable in your file browser and there are graphical extensions for your web browser.
It also uses Git so you can sync it to a remote repository, and Git can be seen as another application that works in a similar manner. It is terminal-based, but there are graphical front ends like gitg.
I have free wildcard certs provided from my domain registrar. I host with Kubernetes, which allows for TLS secrets using Ingress. For external/public usage, I also have an NGINX reverse proxy in front of it.
Definitely an eye-opening view from one of the most well-respected veterans of the community. Thanks for sharing.
Added. Thanks.
Thanks for the heads-up! It’s not meant to be a list of official communities. Just a list of magazines that exist. Nothing stopping kbin users from wanting to use it, and do their own thing locally.
OpenSUSE is not a fork. It’s the base.
No, this is completely false. There was a proposal to add telemetry. There is nothing planned as of yet. In a community distro, we all get to speak. The discussion is ongoing. Those opposed to doing opt-out telemetry appear to be winning that conversation thus far.
Also, other distros do telemetry already. Debian is one of them.
For all the shit Red Hat has gotten, Fedora Linux is still actually a community base distro.
Perhaps elementary OS. Although it feels like its dying somewhat.
I used Debian full-time eons ago, but last time I tried in 2019, it was a dog of a desktop OS to me compared to Fedora. It works fine as a server, but it’s simply not a great desktop.
If you never touch the command line yeah, but how many of us Fedora users don’t do that?
This looks phenomenal-looking. That graph widget should be standardized too.
I’m really not sure what problem this is supposed to solve. Anyone can fork the current source. People don’t care about forks, they want RHEL.
Well, considering Linux is using GPLv2, I think it’d be too late for it to help Linux, which is kind of a big deal I guess.
No, it’s ultimately a product of all the community that works on it. Red Hat doesn’t drive the ship.
Considering how good Firefox is, and how much of a monopoly that Chrome-based browsers have over the web, I’d run Firefox just to support freedom of choice.
Not sure why you’d say that. Fedora is a lot more than just Red Hat, and there are no changes to the way that works.
Removed.