You mean old Ubuntu?
You mean old Ubuntu?
Your opinion seems to be immutable.
But I’m not rolling over.
This, but unironically.
According to that definition, my cat is a cryptid.
Call Microsoft about a bug and tell me how well their support works for you.
Pretty well, actually.
Debian is the only distro in my recent memory that crashed into an unbootable state right after a default installation.
Manual Arch installation is tedious and unnecessary if you’ve done it once, and the automated archinstall fails too often. Other than that, I’ve had literally zero issues with it.
You pay for the convenience.
I don’t often need to print something, but when I do, it’s usually outside of the opening hours of a print shop and I’m in a hurry.
(95% of my printing are fantasy RPG floor plans that I’ve downloaded literally 5 minutes before the players show up.)
Prevention is key:
alias vim='emacs'
“HAHAHA…no”
– Capitalists
My bank requires a second factor for everything done over the web instance. That second factor is either an app or a hardware token generator you have to buy seperately.
Transaction number. It’s a second factor for authentication of basically everything you want to do while banking online.
Most people use a phone app for it (which doesn’t reliably work on degoogled and rooted phones), but you also have the choice of buying a dedicated TAN generator device, so people without smartphones can use online banking.
Things I need from the Play Store are:
Things I don’t need, but use (installed in the same way and run without play services):
So luckily, in Germany, you can live without Google. Nothing actually requires it.
My friends call me “Please fix my printer”.
I bet it’s North Korea!
Framework’s choice for display isn’t Linux compatible.
They really should have set the option Make_Discord_Blurry_On_Framework_Laptops
to "false"
in the Linux kernel.
Just a shot in the dark, but have you logged out and back in at any point?
Some settings can’t be applied in a running session.
He’s the one who was prophesized in the GNU testament.
Yes. Now if you use apt to install Firefox or Thunderbird, it will reinstall snap and install the snap versions of those programs.
If you blacklist snap, it’ll throw an error when you try to install Firefox or Thunderbird cause it can’t resolve their “dependencies”.
You’ll have to install those programs from outside of Ubuntu’s repositories, and the list of affected programs is growing.
Ubuntu’s stated goal is to eventually use snap for all userland apps.