This is obviously offline and the text is pushed to the device by flash drive, right? …right?
This is obviously offline and the text is pushed to the device by flash drive, right? …right?
I’d buy them if they weren’t more than $50
I did the math. It was a nice year.
Op is 54 years old
If he was really “One-Punch Man” he’d have wrapped it up in the first episode.
Just kidding! I’m also looking forward to it.
I just got into it again. I played through 7 and put it away. Begrudgingly bought 8 for the kids and decided it was the same game. Started playing with the wife because she was into it suddenly, just in time for the dlc.
I remember these being suggested to me as a newbie a long time ago.
Please continue to learn! It’s great to bring new perspectives to play.
I kind of answered this elsewhere in the thread, but here is my answer to you.
If you are referring to basic OS level functions, they are super similar, but they are also wildly different.
Ubuntu is based on Debian. It is centered on keyboard and mouse input, often with touchscreen. It uses a Canonical kernel.
Android is its own flavor of Linux, entirely centered on touch input. It uses a heavily customized AOSP kernel.
While I think it might be entirely possible to install and remove packages to have one act like the other, they have wildly different kernels.
Here is a pretty lengthy write up on the subject by Richard Stallman.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2011/sep/19/android-free-software-stallman
Oh, I forgot about Chromebooks and ChromeOS. They are similar, but there are significant differences.
ChromeOS is based on Gentoo. It is centered on keyboard and mouse input, often with touchscreen.
Android is its own flavor of Linux, entirely centered on touch input.
While I think it might be entirely possible to install and remove packages to have one act like the other, we are comparing a different Linux flavor against Android.
Also, my answer is probably generic enough to answer OP.
Are you in a local user group, like a Linux club?
Are you talking about mobile OS? I can’t imagine using Android as a desktop.
The biggest differences are the available packages and the that Android is typically heavily locked down to prevent user access.
Duh, you should make it say things like an Osakan should.
Thank you. I forgot about that game. I had meant to play it for some time.
From experience, this is a stable streamlined process that is now easier than installing Windows.
Thanks. It’s good to hear someone outline what I was thinking. I’m frustrated that the support response made it sound like we shouldn’t be using the software, but I guess I’ll get over it.
I suspect most of it leans heavily on ghostscript, so they are required to provide AGPL. They would like to obtain support contracts, so support requests are considered out of compliance unless they are paid. I find it interesting that they basically have AGPL+ were plus is whatever they have on their license page in addition to AGPL.
That’s how I feel. I’m not a legal expert either. The caveat to this is that there is a disclaimer on the legal page where you are directed to the AGPL that says that you may not, “Use PDFCreator within an application or service that is not licensed under the terms of the AGPL.”
I’m assuming using the software in a Windows environment is allowed as it is distributed as a Windows application. If you are using the software to accept print jobs to PDF in a manner configurable through the default UI without modifying the code or default files, I’m also hard pressed to call it a violation, regardless of the input application.
I think that the concern from PDFForge is that we were asking for assistance with a feature, which crosses the line in any sort of professional setting.
This is how I expected FOSS to function. If you get a chance, check out their license page, which directs prospective users to the AGPL and also has further restrictions on what users may not do.
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I would use a damp wrung-out rag with just a tiny bit of soap in it too wipe it down. I might come back with clean water, still wrung-out.
Wooden toothpicks are great for the cracks because they are softer than the plastic.
I would save the IPA on a swab for any electric contacts, assuming you have removed batteries. If you can’t remove the batteries, I would wait until you are having physical connection issues or have spilled something on it.