How much free/libre/open source software is installed on your computer? public poll Some open source software, but mostly proprietary. – 10 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 50% @Jahus, @Chalmrah, @NR...
I've heard about those things. 1. Isn't that how centralized messaging works? If it's not on a server, how else would it be centrally-stored? 2. I've read about the crypto pr...
What is the difference between American soldiers fighting against Nazis in World War 2, and Antifa fighting against Nazis in 2018?
My grandma. You want her to use the terminal to update her Debian system? Or how about something like Synaptic which notifies her of updates?
But so many people use and rely on Github to promote their projects. Are you telling me that everyone will switch to something else?
When is it a bad thing?!
I don't like tiling window managers. The software I use was made with a mouse in mind. I like the terminal, I like keyboard apps, but why would I navigate something like Firef...
Um... I think it's pretty clear that KDE's good at what it does. Sure, you can do x on i3, but you can't expect it to everything better than y. If I wanted a floating window m...
My question is why people don't just release their code under the public domain instead of MIT?
Are you telling me Debian with Cinnamon isn't a viable alternative to that workflow?
So yes, you can use whatever you want, but if there's a system that can do exactly what you want to do, why not use that? Kali has its use cases, and using it as a home server...
Ah yes I've heard the most popular software for doing something like this is makeMKV. Is it proprietary though? I was wondering if there were any libre tools out yet for it.
So the Germans during nazi Germany that believed in Nazism were sane?
Is it? Didn't Hitler get elected with very little popularity?
Sorry to bother, but the terminology is a bit vague. Installing it natively meaning, install it on my non-virtualized system and make a VM of my system? Or something else?
Am I the only one that thinks that WMs are too hard to use to be practical?
Is there a webpage that lists the different spins of Fedora?
But what does that have to do with Linux not being user-friendly?
Why not use something like LibreOffice to edit papers?
Doesn’t he have to do systemctl enable lightdm?