

My issue with the orphan-crushing machine isn’t only that it’s not in my children’s bedroom


My issue with the orphan-crushing machine isn’t only that it’s not in my children’s bedroom


I mean I get the concern but I’d be surprised if even 1% of Debian users had any interest in running snaps


it’s stochastic terrorism
Get fucking real


No, this would be absurd.


Ran it through chatgpt, all it told me to sleep with a AA battery under my tongue


You’re looking for fastfetch: https://github.com/fastfetch-cli/fastfetch


Basic online safety to you and me can be a bit high-level for many, disproportionately so for those who are going to remain on Windows 10. I don’t like Windows, either 10 or 11, but most of the hardware losing support with 10’s EOL can run a secure and modern operating system just fine, and Windows 11 could have been that if not for the overhead of Microsoft’s telemetry and other bloat. Home users lacking computer proficiency are being thrown under the bus so that Microsoft can generate metric tons of ewaste as they force their enterprise customers to purchase new hardware. With fresh new license keys.
Eh they said that about desktop Linux not that long ago


About as much as the burger I ate yesterday still was one this morning


Donation page link for those who’d also like to send some cash their way: https://opencollective.com/postmarketos
Samsung and others OEMs have little incentive to collaborate with privacy-oriented roms because a large part of their business models depend on the surveillance baked into their technology. They’re only interested in security as far as it frees them from liability, or can be used as worthwhile PR. They might not be based out of the US or China, but they do still operate in said countries and are all too happy to comply with data or unlock requests.
Yeah, bought the st300 after having repeated issues with ventoy not properly mounting disk images causing multiple Linux distro installs to fail. My st300 might be one of my best investments as a technician just for how seamless and simple it is to use.


All the 8 year old hackers running linux were toppling their child labor industry


I find dockerization tends to make things waaaay easier to bring up/take down with simple yet consistent configuration schemes. I distribute all my self hosted stuff across a small cluster of machines- if I want to move a service from one to another it’s as easy as moving the config folder and the docker-compose. Don’t need to have startup scripts, or remembering installation steps after a fresh install, or worry about python/package versions. Plus it helps keep track of what services are set up, soni don’t have to worry about leaving anything unused but still installed and running. And updating is as easy as pulling the images and recreating the containers.
Debatable