immibis

joined 1 year ago
[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 2 points 7 months ago (10 children)

@KarunaX @mozz and it will. The UN seems to be a venue for white supremacists to always get what they want, these days.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 3 points 8 months ago

@notTheCat @linux I haven't tried this but I think a shared boot partition and one installation of grub (I suppose the version you like the most, if you have a preference). You might even want to install grub from neither and do it by hand, just to make sure they won't mess it up. About shared home: not sure. It will work - I just don't know how many little oddities there will be.

EFI partition can be deleted and re-created.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 7 points 9 months ago

@zaknenou @privacy it usually uses Diffie-Hellman key exchange which generates a shared key without revealing it to anyone. There are other ways to do it too.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 2 points 11 months ago

@JoMiran @linux Bitwig Studio is also a non-open-source DAW which works on Linux.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 0 points 11 months ago (1 children)

@weketi6945 "Many of the features which were removed from GNOME like desktop icons and system tray was because their code was complicated so they just removed them."

holy hell, they removed DESKTOP ICONS? Gnome is a joke.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

@weketi6945 So CSD is the only thing that universally works. If you do not implement your own close buttons in your app, GNOME users won't be able to close your app. Of course the GNOME ToolKit has built-in close buttons. This is stupid because you shouldn't have to use the GNOME ToolKit.

One way this could resolve is that half the apps won't draw CSD, and won't be closeable on GNOME, and enough people will complain to GNOME that they add SSDs, or they will stop using GNOME.

Another way it could resolve is that Wayland doesn't catch on because "close buttons are broken."

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 2 points 11 months ago (6 children)

@theshatterstone54 @linux Client-side decorations are such a ridiculously stupid design decision they make the whole Wayland design suspect.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

@Sage_the_Lawyer @linux I don't think selling is how it works. You have to be frustrated enough to seek out alternatives to the mainstream, then you find Linux and try it for yourself and it works okay.

Things made by billion dollar companies with a profit motive are almost always going to be better than things made by random people in their spare time - except in areas like privacy.

You're allowed to try it out before committing to it though.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@fafok20662 @linux Not as long as it's constrained by an open source license, but it's likely going to follow the sqlite model where you take it or leave it, with no feedback. Except it won't be as high quality and alternative-less as sqlite.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@winterayars then why the fuck is systemd involved?

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@winterayars systems targets were formerly known as runlevels, and this particular one probably could also work with init= because what else could you possibly run at the same time?

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 5 points 1 year ago (6 children)

@TCB13 services aren't systemd-related just because they are launched by systemd.

 

@piracy Federation problems? I cannot see any posts newer than 2 days

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