- Joined
- Aug 17, 2018
That's as different as KDE is different from Windows.
How is it a clone?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That's as different as KDE is different from Windows.
Oh no, a WIMP looks like another WIMP.Totally not a clone...
View attachment 3072716View attachment 3072717
To be fair, they did put the date and time at the other end of the bar.
Is that what those really are? Im just reading through everyone's little spats and I dont know much about Docker mounting or flatpaks and such, but this sounds super interesting and convenient, coming from someone with absolutely no knowledge of working with LinuxI've never understood the beef with appimages and flatpaks. Yeah, they're bloated and inefficient but you double click and 〜IT〜JUST〜WORKS〜
I think I'm beginning to understand the problem.double click
Ever noticed how in the past ~15 years the computers didn't become faster, despite carrying more cores, RAM and whatnot?Is that what those really are? Im just reading through everyone's little spats and I dont know much about Docker mounting or flatpaks and such, but this sounds super interesting and convenient, coming from someone with absolutely no knowledge of working with Linux
I noticed that Microsoft Excel is effectively the same program that it has been since (at least) 2006 and that computers have almost quadrupled in power since then, and yet Excel still slows to a fucking crawl if I have six or seven spreadsheets open at once and am copy-pasting between them.Ever noticed how in the past ~15 years the computers didn't become faster, despite carrying more cores, RAM and whatnot?
To start, I like to keep books as references so I will recommend picking up a copy of "How Linux Works" and "The Linux Command Line" from No Starch Press, especially since you're in the "Unknown Unknowns" category of *NIX knowledge. The sooner you can develop the habit of working with the command line, the happier you will be with Linux. There's a philosophy of every program's input and output is plaintext that most software follows.Here's another question:
What are some cool fun stuff to do on Linux once I've chosen a distro to dabble in? I mostly accomplish all I need to do on my primary windows machine, but I dont wanna put the second gen i3 Linux machine I have to just doing office work and internet browsing. I wanna do some fun stuff on it.
As mentioned before, I'm completely new to this stuff--GUIs are my friend and the furthest I've gone with the CLI is running pre-set scripts for YT-DLG. Still, I'm willing to get my hands dirty and fiddle with stuff.
Off the top of my head, I'm thinking of a cheap NAS/Torrent box or some kind of auxiliary machine, but I'm down to hear what you folks have to recommend.
Here are some things from my bucket list that I never got around doing due to lack of time or resources that I believe can be pulled off with a second gen i3:Here's another question:
What are some cool fun stuff to do on Linux once I've chosen a distro to dabble in? I mostly accomplish all I need to do on my primary windows machine, but I dont wanna put the second gen i3 Linux machine I have to just doing office work and internet browsing. I wanna do some fun stuff on it.
As mentioned before, I'm completely new to this stuff--GUIs are my friend and the furthest I've gone with the CLI is running pre-set scripts for YT-DLG. Still, I'm willing to get my hands dirty and fiddle with stuff.
Off the top of my head, I'm thinking of a cheap NAS/Torrent box or some kind of auxiliary machine, but I'm down to hear what you folks have to recommend.
The number one thing I love about Linux distributions is how program management and updates are unified by the package manager. I can type the update command, punch in the root password, and go take a piss while everything just werks (I have not had Void Linux break after an update in many years, even when I have not updated a computer for over a year). But all this other auxiliary shit (cargo, pip, and npm included) means I have more shit to keep track of and update and configure and worry about breakage.I've never understood the beef with appimages and flatpaks. Yeah, they're bloated and inefficient but you double click and 〜IT〜JUST〜WORKS〜
Ever noticed how in the past ~15 years the computers didn't become faster, despite carrying more cores, RAM and whatnot?
Hardware has gotten so good that programs are now made without needing to cut out all the bloat.I noticed that Microsoft Excel is effectively the same program that it has been since (at least) 2006 and that computers have almost quadrupled in power since then, and yet Excel still slows to a fucking crawl if I have six or seven spreadsheets open at once and am copy-pasting between them.
I'm actually pissed off about this. What the fuck is Excel doing now that it wasn't a decade ago, that's somehow hogging all of the extra RAM that I now have available? Because I sure as fuck haven't noticed any new useful features.
Moore's Law is now in the realm of parallel processing. It is faster if you are doing graphics or highly parallel work with GPUs. Not so much with CPU performance.Ever noticed how in the past ~15 years the computers didn't become faster, despite carrying more cores, RAM and whatnot?
I think the user experience(for 'normal' users and traditional apps) probably peaks around 4 cores. 1 for the app they're using, 1 for network and disk I/O, 1 for the UI/display/keyboard. And one for overhead.Moore's Law is now in the realm of parallel processing. It is faster if you are doing graphics or highly parallel work with GPUs. Not so much with CPU performance.
Thanks for admitting my point, I guess? Though I'd restate that as "developers" (because they're not programmers any more, oh no!) are too lazy (and/or too corporate) to actually, you know, write code anymore.Hardware has gotten so good that programs are now made without needing to cut out all the bloat.
Thing is - very few problems scale well to parallel processing.Moore's Law is now in the realm of parallel processing. It is faster if you are doing graphics or highly parallel work with GPUs. Not so much with CPU performance.
select()
(or poll()
, or epoll()
, or whatever) is not "parallel processing".I've never used Pihole, but if this is possible, I'm doing it! Keep us updated.I also want to make a pihole-esque proxy that instead of blocking traffic intercepts telemetry from several places and spoofs the packets with new ones containing the word "nigger" before sending them on their merry way but I'm on the stage where I wonder if it's even doable.
I don't sympathize with either of them given their pronouns proudly displayed on their profiles but jesus man, Cassidy was asked to give full control of a company he helped co-found for 26,000 dollars while his ex-friend argued that he didn't deserve a share nor have any power in the decision making of said company because he wasn't getting any work done on an OS that has been overtaken by the competition (Zorin) and is no longer making any money. This is just a bad business deal and only a retard would agree to these terms.Drama within elementary OS:
Founder of the elementary OS project Cassidy Blaede has found a full time job because elementary employees took a 5% pay cut due to decreased revenue. Other founder and relatively recent troon Danielle Foré assumed Cassidy would fuck off the project with money and relinquish his shares. Cassidy said something along the lines of "yeah no, I'm keeping my ownership of elementary"; Dan and Cassidy argued (and aren't friends anymore), apparently Dan offered a 50/50 split of the company assets, Cassidy said "give me more money", they both lawyer'd up or something. All of this was relayed to the public via a tweet thread by Dan.
Cassidy remained businesslike in his tweets saying something along the lines of "there was a disagreement, I was told lawyers were getting involved, I'm advised to not go into detail, don't fuck with Dan."
Source:dude trust me lmaohttps://archive.ph/vNEY2 -- Lunduke's substack with twitter links
Original article: https://lunduke.substack.com/p/elementary-os-is-imploding