Yeah, that makes sense. Thanks!
halm
Judging by the amount of facial hair growth Boimler’s exhibited over the course of the three episodes this season, we can assume that so far the entire season has taken place over about 17 hours.
Now now, let's not be normative about the speed of facial hair growth. Some people take longer filling in their mustache and beards than others, and this could easily be something like 17 days if Boimler has particularly slow and/or sparse facial hair.
Characters were artificial body parts include […] Jack Crusher [personality]
Harsh, but true.
Focus instead on enforcing standards’ compliance
For sure, but ¿por qué no los dos?
Completely agree with your other prioritisations.
I don't think anybody would say otherwise. Both Manjaro and Endeavour mean to make Arch more appealing to users who aren't comfortable with command line configuration.
Endeavour has arguably done better than Manjaro, but yeah. They're just some configs on top of a system that does very well on its own.
It would make so much more sense to fund existing Linux development than making a new distro, tbh.
If the EU changed to Linux systems and donated the same amount back to open source development as they currently pay for Microsoft licenses, that would make a hell of a difference.
Exactly, for the pencil pushers it's going to be a transition from one desktop and office suite to another. Hardly "learning Linux".
I see more of a challenge on sys admins and department IT support who may have gotten comfy giving mostly Microsoft product support.
the most extreme POV possible
Absolutely not. Somebody may still wade into the discussion and Godwin themselves.
Um, yes. It is odd, and you get some things ass backward:
But then the government is dependent on this private company again
To my knowledge Linux is community driven. I can only assume that's Murena and /e/OS you're talking about, then? In which case, that was my point.
I am shocked that most governments in the world don’t have their own distribution. It just makes sense.
Yeah, makes sense to North Korea, too. I'm not sure they're an example to follow, though.
To be clear, nation states controlling the tools that their employees and, potentially, wider population communicate and access information is a dystopian vision, and I cannot agree with that point at all.
It really depends on what you're looking for. I'm happy with Lineage, but others go for stricter privacy setups like Graphene. As long as you can avoid G Apps, IMHO you're fine. But that's still Android in some form.
The whole Linux phone experiment is a lovely idea that (if I understand correctly) is hampered by the tons of different mobile phone makes and models. Canonical dropped Ubuntu Touch like a hot potato, and it only survived as a community project.
For your last question, there's the Lemmy terminal viewer — I think it's unmaintained, but it's a start?
Here's an idea: not buying "smart devices" that turn into fancy paperweights the second they aren't connected to a WiFi network.
- A scale doesn't need to connect to a server.
- The lights in your house don't need to be connected to a server.
- Your fridge, etc.
If they do, that's for something completely different than what you bought them to do. And if there's no FOSS app to control those extraneous features, it's a black box.
That's fair. But we do not know the specifics of that parallel universe Boimler's face fur: