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Pretty sure I was fooling around with LimeWire at that age
Thought to have been an ordinary falling star.
Pretty sure I was fooling around with LimeWire at that age
I don’t see you contributing much of value either…
MicroOS is designed as a server OS first and foremost, but I have read some anecdotes of people using it just fine on the desktop.
You might want to look into OpenSUSE Aeon or Kalpa instead, which are immutable editions designed for the desktop, running GNOME and KDE respectively. Kalpa is in alpha (almost rhymed) but Aeon is in a more mature state.
But isn’t one of the running jokes that Heathcliff loves garbage…?
So when we actually do have AI, what are we supposed to call it? The current use of the term “AI” is too ambiguous to be of any use.
Just wanted to add that OpenSUSE MicroOS uses Tumbleweed repos by default, so I’m fairly sure that’s an atomic rolling release too. Not 100% sure, though.
My point was that you can’t be an advanced user without first being a non-advanced user
(and side note, I’ve been using Linux for over 20 years on and off… still use Nano)
How are you supposed to become an advanced user, then?
Wonder how much mileage they’re gonna get out of the MEAT shop.
Eh, JavaScript is overrated anyway
I liked GLIDE, which was suggested a few years ago, though I can’t remember what the acronym was now
Windows 95 -> 98 -> SuSE …9? -> XP -> Ubuntu 10 -> Windows 7 -> Windows 10 (alongside a bunch of Debian servers) -> MX Linux -> Debian
Also went Windows 10 -> Kubuntu -> VanillaOS -> Kinoite on my laptop for what it’s worth.
It’s got that weird typeface too.
At the risk of seeming to throw shade; why use Brave at all if you’re going to switch off all its unique features?
And also a belly button but is apparently wearing shorts…?
Correct!
My dad had a Raspberry Pi running Kodi, complete with a bunch of Totally Legit plugins which allowed him to watch anything he wanted. Thought it was legal and above board because… wait for it… it’s open-source
I hate to be nitpicky; but that’s a decompilation, not a demake.
‘Demake’ usually refers to a game that gets remade for a system older (or less powerful) than the one it was released for. A good current example is the in-progress Super Mario 64 demake for GBA.
‘Decompilation’ is where one reverse-engineers a game (or any software!) back to its original source code, or close enough that when you build it, it’s identical to an original copy. So, the goal of the Lego Island demake is to produce source code that can be built into a fully binary-compatible copy of Lego Island, indistinct from what’s on the original CD.
My dad got into Kazaa in the mid-00s, then Limewire, before discovering Mininova and TPB. Just kinda saw what he was doing and thought it was interesting. (We were often told not to touch the computer as it’d “knock off his download”…)
I seem to recall one of the first things I pirated was… er, Pirates of the Caribbean, which I watched with my friends huddled round my laptop. Quality times.
Oh no