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Come join us on the dark side in !cranetrainexcavators@lemmy.world
Come join us on the dark side in !cranetrainexcavators@lemmy.world
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Gnome is certainly the most polished. They just need to get over the ultra minimalism though, because it is completely non functional without installing a thousand extensions.
Why they aren’t bringing back the dock is beyond insanity though. 3 million+ people agree, the dock needs to come back along with the application and places drop-down like it was in gnome 2.
Is there a more effective one, that slowly edits all your comments a little bit at a time so it misses their detection over a period of weeks/months? Like scrambling/nonsense sentences.
There was a book whose card when blunk when they looked up.
Like completely non sensical but a real sentence so it would be hard to detect.
Metaverse. mozilla.social is the fediverse
fediverse*
I believe the general consensus is that hooking a smart TV to the Internet is generally a bad idea.
The two PCs were identical hardware btw, so in my case Live just worked 10x better.
I mean the Vero V seems to be a nice polished experience. It’s just a lot of work to setup a linux box and get it to work, the latter being the hard part. The wiimote and the flirc have some comments in reviews about being poor experiences, and I just want it to be on par with the Roku or it’ll wind up in the trash heap. I don’t mind paying a little bit extra for a finished solution, and it seems like a plus that the Vero is a community/libre project.
trying to get away from Google services / looking for a libre solution.
I would 100% do this (minus the pirating part) if there was a way to get a tv style remote for the box. That’s the biggest obstacle for me because I’ve never been able to find a PC/tv remote and non technical users will be using the TV.
Android/Google telemetry.
I’d like just one piece of technology that doesn’t use my information to sell to the highest bidder.
I’ve only recently switched to Debian after a couple decades with Ubuntu (because snaps) and I had a few issues during installation.
The net install failed to configure my wifi so I had to download the DVD/CD install. That worked but then I had to manually nano several config files to fix about 5 broken things for some reason.
I installed it recently on a different system, and went with the Live option (gnome) and it installed 10x easier and smoother than Ubuntu. It installed in about 4 minutes (on a new/fast computer).
So I would say Debian Live is VERY beginner friendly, but the other install methods are all messed up for some reason. Ubuntu’s default option is the Live option so I think that if Debian just kinda hid the other options on their website it would be 100% beginner friendly…
OH, INTERESTING INFORMATION. THANKS! ;)
why flatpaks? Aren’t they more insecure and bloated? They seem like the wrong direction for Linux.
RoMote (Turns your Android Device into a control center for Roku)
I see - thanks for taking the time to explain the backstory, very interesting.
serious question… not everyone on Lemmy is a computer expert, lol
I don’t quite understand, why would Microsoft sue you for a lemmy comment?
Something tells me they’ll enshitiffy too. It would make me uneasy storing all my passwords with a for profit corp, on their servers.