Yeah, all of those expenses would've been covered by the taxes where I live. Even the student debt - we get about $900 per month while studying and education is free.
Y'all need some democratic socialism
Yeah, all of those expenses would've been covered by the taxes where I live. Even the student debt - we get about $900 per month while studying and education is free.
Y'all need some democratic socialism
Compared to almost all other distros, Arch is advanced in the way that it's the simplest of them all. Nothing except the very basics are set up for you, so it's tough to start with.
Yes, it very much is.
I have been on multiple computers. It hasn't asked me on my phone.
I'm in Europe so it makes sense they can't just enable it. We also don't have Threads yet, for example.
Proton is just Valve's fork of Wine. It had a lot of game-specific patches, to make all the Steam games work better.
Wine isn't meant specifically for games - you can run most Windows applications in it. It's just translations of Windows syscalls to Linux equivalents, to put it simply.
So your region does not have laws prevent them from automatically enabling it.
No... It pops up and asks you very clearly if you want to enable it. It also shows what it is, what's being tracked, and who the information is shared with.
No.. Even if that was true, what you're saying is "you're right, but you might not be in a month, sooo Google bad".
It won't be opt-out because first of all, that's against the law. And second you're literally opting in by accepting their terms...
I disagree in that it's misleading. But how dafuq du they have a monopoly on web browsers? That's just stupid
I live in Europe, and it's most definitely opt-in.
I just have
pack
andextract
functions in my shell RC files that look at file extensions and use the proper tool with proper arguments.Wrote them 10 years ago and they've worked flawlessly ever since!