Des milkshake. C’est qu’on a fait au Royaume-Uni. Ca marche plutôt bien
Des milkshake. C’est qu’on a fait au Royaume-Uni. Ca marche plutôt bien
My recommendation would be Fedora or CentOS if you want a stable workstation you won’t have to reinstall. Debian is also a great choice. OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is okay but I found it a little clunky compared to the others. Avoid EndevourOS and Manjaro like the plague.
Vinegar, Lemon juice and warm water.
Using it as an adjective in some cases is fine, never use it as a noun, unfortunately due to assholes using it that way it now has a negative conotation.
Reading this gave me an aneurism
This article sounds extremely fishy and borderline conspiracy-like to me.
Imho the only guarantee of privacy I need is the source code.
Yes, but if you intend to mainly use flatpak you might want to try fedora Silverblue
No, you can’t : in an immutable distro I can reasonably trace almost any file in the filesystem back to the package that created it, and know with a reasonable degree of certainty that the installed version of said file has not been tampered with. That isn’t possible an a normal distro.
Please do share with me what I do not understand.
A mostly read only filesystem built from a limited number of packages, with other files being in a fixed number of locations mean it is harder for malware to hide.
Very good choice :D
I used to daily drive arch, until university, when I got frustrated at the issues it caused me and the time I needed to solve them.
I’d recommend fedora if you want real solid stability.
I don’t think the DE itself matters, but I can recommend using an immutable OS (makes it harder to install malware) and installing flatpak apps only. You can also use software like flatseal to further lock down permissions
There is so much wrong with this post. Half of the points raised are utter bullshit
Dell’s current lineup is not to expensive (≈400) and runs Linux well
So jarring that you couldn’t just… Press no?
It’s not a new law. The GDPR has been around for years, but meta only recently lost a legal case saying that they cannot contractually force users to provide their data in exchange for access to the service.
But the GDPR also says consent has to be freely given, some interpet this as meaning that forcing people to pay in order for their data not to be used for ads is not freely given consent.
This is more than likely illegal in the EU…
This is more than likely illegal in the EU…
Fairphone 4 with CalyxOS
A modern UI for ClamAV or a Subsonic Music Streaming client (In gtk4)