Besides, Plasma can look like anything else anyway, so why switch?
Besides, Plasma can look like anything else anyway, so why switch?
Cut him some slack, it was his first (and last) flight.
It’s, um, to enhance the WiFi signal. Well known trick.
Apple snobbery isn’t really much of a thing in my region. I find it rather bizarre.
Do people buy phones according to how fast they can get to the last digit of pi anyway (or whatever tjey compute with) or just based on how tiktok looks?
If it’s your os drive that dies, nothing important has been lost except for a few minutes of work. You can boot from a variety of media (cd, usb…) for recovery, or drive replacement. Worst case, you’ll have to reinstall a few things in the following days.
It’s also why it’s not a bad idea to separate the various aspects of the system on distinct drives.
The OS is the least important part of your computer.
It’s a well known fact that ties restrict the blood flow to the brain;
From reading online, it seems to be a feature of some segments of the US market.
I’m currently using my first Samsung device in a while (handed down by someone who didn’t like it) and it’s just like any other phone.
I’m not in the US though.
What I could hold against them is how some of their devices have extra features enabled within the brand’s ecosystem. I understand it’s a basic way to keep users with the brand without being too harsh (everything still works with another appliance after all), but it’s still a bit crummy.
Maybe someone ought to rewrite rust in C.
No, it’s still touché.
Like everyone else, two legs at a time.
They even made a movie about it!
Writing sql is just like writing anything else, but uppercase.
Amazing. They put a screen on one side and cameras on the other!
What incredible things will they come up with next?
Up to date and stable. Best of both worlds.
I’ve run OpenSuSE and then Tumbleweed for a while (as in years, now) on a variety of devices (including nVidia) with no real issues. It’s been by far the most solid of the distributions I’ve used since I started using Linux in the '90s.
It’s always been for USeR binaries. It’s the first time I’ve seen this bizarre backronym (40 years of Unix here).
Magic.