I am a certified Linux user with over 20 years of experience.
Please run the following command in a terminal:
sudo dnf install apt
And then try the instructions above. Let me know if this fixes your issue
- certified Linux expert
I am a certified Linux user with over 20 years of experience.
Please run the following command in a terminal:
sudo dnf install apt
And then try the instructions above. Let me know if this fixes your issue
Agreed. The great defaults in Plasma definitely are a major draw for me.
That tracks, I think Vüdü Linux is a dead project.
In case you missed it, it’s an xkcd reference
Canonical’s been selling commercial support for Ubuntu Core for a while now. Why would they abandon it if it’s working?
At a previous job we had an unholy combination of the last two:
HTTP/1.1 200 POST /endpoint
{
"data": null,
"errors": ["403", "unauthorized"],
"success": false
}
Valve are one of the major reasons that Microsoft’s attempts at the iOSification of Windows failed. Their investments in Linux are directly aimed at preventing what Apple is doing.
Tim Sweeney is a freeloader depending on companies like Valve to protect him from these threats to his company.
Android doesn’t count, but what about my PinePhone?
Hand them to zoomers as 3d printed save buttons
You know what else would be awesome? “Update, reboot, and (just this once) automatically login”
It would be super useful for when I’m alone at home working but want to do updates over my lunch break.
It really depends what one’s doing, also. For many things, including many games, 30fps is fine for me. But I need at least 60fps for mousing. Beyond that though I don’t notice the mouse getting smoother above 60fps, but some games I do have a better experience at 120fps. And I’m absolutely sold on 500+ fps for simulating paper.
If someone’s saying that about 30fps they should just set their refresh rate to 30 and move their mouse.
I thought this was ridiculous but the kitty cuddles while playing sold me.
Use Activity Aware Firefox and set it as your default browser.
I learned lolcode in college because we had to write a sorting algorithm in assembly and “any other programming language.”
It is theoretically automatable, but on bare metal it requires having hardware that’s not normally just sitting in every data centre, so it would still require someone to go and plug something into each machine.
On VMs it’s more feasible, but on those VMs most people are probably just mounting the disk images and deleting the bad file to begin with.
Pretty amazing that years of effort from massive competitors like Epic and Microsoft haven’t managed to crack this. I wonder what they’re doing wrong?
(Ok I lied. I know exactly what they’re doing wrong and there’s zero chance of them changing.)
I know at least of Freexian. But also, Ubuntu tends to cover the “Like Debian, but with enterprise support” niche.
Can confirm that it can do this fairly well.
Source: the time I grabbed a machine we were about to toss and made it a secondary domain controller for our site so we could nuke and pave our misbehaving Server 2012 DC.
(That other one was also a secondary DC - we just needed one on-site so we could prevent our T1 connection to another site from being the bottleneck.)