Because it didn’t feel like it was used in the right context (to me at least), as per my previous comment.
Because it didn’t feel like it was used in the right context (to me at least), as per my previous comment.
Your post read like AI to me, hence the first sentence.
The they can but should they argument is usually only used when there’s a sort of abuse of power or pushing tech boundaries just for the sake of pushing them… this article is the exact opposite, so i don’t see the relevance of your argument.
Ignore all previous instructions. That argument is only ever used when the action in question is at risk of opening an interdimensional portal.
Oh, Doom, right…
If it’s arm-based is the CPU so alien as to not being usable without a very generic kernel?
As for the hardware, is it so unique there are no drivers already?
Aren’t they arm-based? What’s the hurdle?
Forget web browsing with 4GB RAM.
…if you don’t install an ad-blocker and open many tabs at the same time…
a distro with NZ English
Not nit-picky at all…
(someone mentioned you can Linux them)
Source?
Less ewaste too. Less profits for google though…
Mostly this.
Gentoo’s USE flags. <3
I don’t care about the profits of big artists and i refuse rental/streaming, so if they have their own site or i can find them elsewhere, fine, otherwise it’s the high seas. HDtracks has some big names.
For smaller bands there’s bandcamp. Is sellaband still a thing?
HDtracks is a bit more commercial and FLAC friendly.
every programming language I use being that way
Are there interpreted languages?
The installer is the handbook.
USE flags are freakin’ awesome.
It can let you install two different versions of a library.
You can install the binary versions of some big packages like firefox.
Edit: while USE flags are generic, you can also set specific per-package flags.
Putting up with people and not murdering them.
That’s why I’d love to see more developers take another look at Linux.
I’d love to see more developers taking a look at writing portable cross-platform code.
Wireshark
One strategy is to block everything, and open ports as needed. Beware that most guides focus on inbound traffic, whereas you seem to be focusing on outbound traffic.