There were shadowy conspiracists lurking in the dark alleys of Washington, and hiding from the glaring sun in the High Desert of California, but they were laughably easy prey when the Martian lizard people, the subterranean Vril-empowered mole-men, and the globalist pedophile Commies did show up.
That's still not Debian ;)
IMO Ubuntu without Snap, but with a default Gnome or KDE (and a visual DE selector screen during installation) would be absolutely perfect.
Cons: It's not Debian
In case you're wondering, we're currently in the "Prelude" chapter of the Wikipedia article on WW3, paragraph title "Rising Social Tensions".
"comrade"?
Are you implying that Russia is in any way more communist or less capitalist than the US?
Cause you'd be wrong.
Impossible to tell. But in my small German home town alone, several people died from delayed care in a hospital, after its IT system was brought down by Russian hackers.
Thus "phenomenology" means αποφαινεσθαι τα φαινομενα – to let that which shows itself be seen from itself in the very way in which it shows itself from itself. And stuff”
― Martin Heidegger
I just stumbled upon something called "Doki Doki Literature Club".
Yes or No?
Thanks for the recommendation! Feel free to rattle off your top 3 2D games, too.
According to some social media bubbles, it should have dropped to 1/10 in the past 2 years.
Russia is blatantly waging war against Western Europe, and no one is doing anything about it because they aren't using strictly military equipment, and acknowledging that the war has already started would have implications the EU doesn't want to admit, yet.
I know we all want to believe Russia's economy is way worse than ever and almost back in the stone age by now, but if you look at the long term, unfortunately it's not that dramatic...
Thanks, edited it into the post.
Das ist der Oststadt Martin David Braun 5 aus dem Jakob Schuldverschreibung Film "Nein Mal Zu Sterben".
Macho Man Randy Savage would be concerned if he was still alive.
What are the best games you can play on a laptop?
I'm looking for titles that will run well on my only computer. Which is a 5-year-old 13" convertible laptop attached to a docking station with a 24" 1920x1080 screen. It's got Intel internal graphics.
For reference, Skyrim runs well on it at 1920x1080 and high settings.
What would you recommend? Mostly interested in open world RPGs.
Specs: Intel Core i5-10210 (4 cores, 8 threads, 4.2GHz) 8GB LPDDR3 (2133 MHz) RAM Intel UHD Graphics w/ HDCP support. DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.5 shared memory
What party in the US wants to restrict access to meat?
Because. We. Live. In. A. Society.
Fun fact: The English collective noun for multiple Americans is a "volume".
My parents came over to visit. I served them potato soup.
I peeled and diced 8 potatoes, 3 onions, a parsnip, 3 cloves of garlic and a thumb-sized piece of fresh ginger. Put all of it in a pot with 3 table spoons of sunflower oil, and let it braise till the veggies browned a bit. Then I deglazed it with 200g of crème fraîche, 4 tea spoons of vegetable broth powder, and boiling water till it was all covered.
Added copious amounts of freshly-ground black pepper, nutmeg, turmeric, and something a Moroccan street trader sold to my sister-in-law as "lazy wives' spice" ("you won't need anything else to make your husband happy").
When the potatoes were boiled soft, I blended the soup to a creamy consistency and served it with a dash of Sriracha sauce.
They liked it.
Is anyone here using an enterprise Linux distro?
For example Red Hat Enterprise Linux or SUSE Enterprise Linux.
I'm considering switching to RHEL, to get a "professional" Linux, since it's free if you register an account, but is it worth it? Is the experience very different from Fedora?
OS market share in Top 500 supercomputers
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercomputer_operating_system Author: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Benedikt.Seidl Data from: http://top500.org/stats
Every OS sucks
YouTube Video
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(Beginning of the song: https://youtu.be/d85p7JZXNy8?t=84 )
WTF are these menu entries?
- install Linux
- install Gnome
- install some software
- reboot
- these icons are in my menu
- clicking on them does nothing
I know there's probably an explanation for it, which may make sense if you're used to the Linux ecosystem. But to anyone else, it's just weird that there are buttons in my user-friendly GUI button-clicky desktop environment that make no sense, that I didn't install, and that do nothing when I click on them.
(Yes, I know I can hide them by editing a text file. Or installing a menu editor that was designed for a version of Gnome from 20 years ago and still works most of the time)
Serious question: Linux/Unix was designed from the ground up to be a multi-user, server-client system. So how come it can't even come close to the functionality and ease of use of Active Directory?
Don't get me wrong, I used to be a Linux fanboy. But after Admining in both the Linux and Windows world, I have to say: There's a reason Microsoft has a dominant market position in business.
AD is fucking awesome. And I don't understand why Linux is so...finnicky out of the box. There just isn't a unified default out of the box solution where you can click a button to create a domain controller and have everything in your domain tied together, from user rights on all clients, to file shares, to mailboxes. This should be the strong point of Unix-likes, considering their history, but it just isn't.
On AD, you authenticate once when you log into your PC (which even works without contact to the authentication server). And then all the resources you're allowed to use are available to you. All the admin has to do for new users is assign them to the right groups in a GUI or with a script, and everything is taken care of.
On Linux, that just isn't the case (unless the domain is managed by AD, that integrates Linux clients well also). Linux is stuck in a time where your client was nothing more than a keyboard attached to a network device that connects you directly to the server.
And authentication is a mess out of the box. A password prompt should have the purpose of checking whether the correct person is sitting in front of the keyboard to do things. On Linux, you log into your client when you boot it. But by default, every time you want to access system resources which you are already allowed to use you need to authenticate again – from within the user account that's already authenticated. It makes no sense.
And don't even get me started on how awesome GPO's are compared to the methods you have to manage Linux clients.
What were the magic letters you need to add again, to just fucking unpack something?
Bonus question: With or without - ?
ELI5: ipv6
Seriously, my knowledge ends with:
- It offers a shitload of IP addresses
- They look really complicated
- Something about every device in your local network being visible from everywhere?
- Some claim it obsoletes NAT?
I get that it's probably too complicated a subject for an ELI5, so if there are good videos or resources explaining it in less than half an hour, feel free to share.