I feel like people have an interesting view of techy/advanced/etc
My view is that you need to pick something in line with your goals: some people may be techy but just need something to host files and a web browser and don’t care about new packages or whatever, or modern security or anything. I wouldn’t recommend mint or fedora for a gaming PC regardless of techiness, you know?
To be fair the nobara website is very “pet project” both in the design and also in the frequent warnings about using it for anything real. Is a good distro tho, having said that.
Agreed, this is the distro that worked best for my needs (modern security, without wanting to die from maintenance of that security)
To be fair arch has amazing docs, and even a rube like me can follow it decently well. I found endeavor to be the easiest distro to use. But agreed the attitude isn’t great.
Calling people stupid and lazy in nicer words is still calling people stupid and lazy.
Oh and here I thought it was what gnome devs thought I would like ;p
This is more akin to you taking a picture of your own junk in a public bathroom stall. Or using face unlock while you’re on the toilet.
Obviously nobody’s gonna win in an internet argument but you should really take a look at the extremes with which you view this stuff. /Serious.
Exactly, we are on the same page.
That’s why external feedback is needed. When you exist within a hierarchy you can discount your “lessers”. Everyone needs feedback. “They should’ve known better” is a fine thing to say but not helpful in a system as devoid of morality or hope as capitalism is.
Magic earth is ok for nav but the problem with all openstreetmaps options remains the terrible search. This has been my experience for the past decade.
Recently the folks at jmp.chat released an alpha search which passes navigation intents in Android to the nav app of your choice, so I think we are getting close to a real alternative in the next few years.
The irony of this is (1) apple being their major competition (their only competition with more than 1% market share) and (2) their history as being the console maker that wanted to essentially sell a home theater PC as a console.
Tons of tutorials out there but think of it as two pieces 1 is a bunch of servers that hold Stuff 1 is an index that tells you what that stuff is
If you’re willing to pay $5-15/mo for ease of use, it’s a reliable way to get data of all kinds. Some is even legal.
Tldr: It’s the client-server version of torrent’s peertopeer
Don’t be a gatekeeping dick. I was there to use limewire and had only learned of Usenet 4 months ago and the benefits are non obvious by design.
But what happens when everyone hates the design? How’s that for morale?
*your
Stockholm syndrome ;)
But honestly it’s been several years for me, since before covid, but at the time it only looked good by virtue of Amazon and Hulu being godawful. Now I just have my own jellyfin server set up with Linux isos, and jellyfish open source UI puts Netflix to shame when it comes to browsing Linux isos
Oh facts on that one, still dont really get it tbh but most of my use it’s containered anyway