Yeah, I bought my first laptop, a Thinkpad T43, in 2005. It had something like 512MB-1GB of RAM, a Pentium M processor, and 156 GB of HDD (not SDD). Very good for the time, but there are Raspberry Pi's with better specs these days.
pingveno
I tried the hybrid that works under UEFI and legacy BIOS. It didn't work on at least one system. Did you try UEFI only?
Nah, let's be honest, this is so that parents can make sure precious little Bobby doesn't catch The Gay. LGBT themed cinema is going to let you know, this is for making sure there isn't a trace of homosexuality to darken Bobby's pure little heart.
The same general group of people are pushing court cases to overturn the approval of the abortion pill and to bust gun control wide open. See constitutional carry (total misnomer).
Yeah, I have it for personal photos that will never be shared. If I am traveling, I want a record of where a given photo was. But those aren't photos I am sharing, and the ones I do share get their metadata stripped.
pipx is also a good way to install a virtualenv and link up any executables that the package exposes.
Edit: So installation would be:
pipx install awktutorial
And it would automatically make the executable available to the user as long as pipx's bin directory is in the user's PATH.
I'm pretty sure Microsoft can tell them to fuck off. Maybe they pay millions, but even then MS has to weigh the possibility of bad press and lawsuits against a relatively paltry sum. The larger problem will be if someone finds a workaround or simply ignores the terms of service, I think. This article talked about the "United States Police Department," but there is no such department. Law enforcement in the US is highly fragmented across the federal, state, and local levels. Any of them could just decide to break the terms of service.
I found it was useful for learning bits and pieces of the extra knowledge around working on a Linux system. Yeah, you're not going to learn how a kernel works or how anything about data structures. But you will learn how to apply a patch, be exposed to a lot of work with the shell, and come to appreciate the work that goes into a modern distro.
There's no level of package management, binary or source. There's no practical way to uninstall or upgrade. It's a toy for learning about Linux, which is great, but don't expect it to have anything else.
Edit: I seem to remember some third party package managers, but then you're going beyond the base level documentation. And at a certain point, then you might as well just use a distro. If you want to have a very minimal package manager so you can learn about package managers, sure, it's a learning tool.
I'm unclear from the documentation, does pkexec work under non-GUI contexts?
Though a Rust clone of sudo that operates in the same way will still have the same problems.
Yes, yes we do.