I'd say arch is a great distro if you love to tinker a lot and/or want to learn a lot about the Linux ecosystem. If you don't recognize yourself in previous sentence I'd probably stick with fedora ๐คท
Bogasse
I briefly used Fedora (Gnome) on my SP7 which worked super well. Then I moved to NixOS because I'm a nerd ๐ค
Man, we're not even 3 months in (6%) and everyone starts preparing for world war 3. Americans needs to step up now.
Well, the comment that showed bust above yours shows an article from NYT doing exactly that ๐ฎโ๐จ
(From webghodt0101 : https://lemmy.ml/comment/17118372)
A bit out of context my you recall me of some thinking I heard recently about lying vs. bullshitting.
Lying, as you said, requires quite a lot of energy : you need an idea of what the truth is and you engage yourself in a long-term struggle to maintain your lie and keep it coherent as the world goes on.
Bullshit on the other hand is much more accessible : you just have to say things and never look back on them. It's very easy to pile a ton of them and it's much harder to attack you about any of them because they're much less consequent.
So in that view, a bullshitter doesn't give any shit about the truth, while a liar is a bit more "noble". 0
You don't need any knowledge of computers to understand how big of a deal it would be if we actually built a reliable fact machine. For me the only possible explanation is to not care enough to try and think about it for a second.
I've been willingly enabling data collection features for Mozilla but I guess that time is revolute, they don't feel trustworthy anymore.
Well I suppose LibreWolf (or some other de-branded Firefox) will become more mainstream. Similar to what chromium is to chrome ๐คท
When the internet archive was attacked a few months ago we were like "who would be dumb and mean enough to do that?". We have new suspects! ๐
Sadly I kept it private because it exposes a bit of my company's network structure (with encrypted secrets, but still...) :/
It's not the best experience though : the pencil doesn't work as well as in Fedora (GNOME doesn't detect tablet mode, which only seems to affect buttons behavior) and it recompiles the kernel everytime it needs to be updated (very often, so I pinned a version).