I’m 24 and I’ve not done anything. Kids, if you’re reading this, it wasn’t worth anything. Stop listening to alpha/sigma bros, just go and have fun. Grift is all a lie.
Want more GNU in Linux, so Guix, btw. पूंजीपति will be sent to corrective labour camp.
I’m 24 and I’ve not done anything. Kids, if you’re reading this, it wasn’t worth anything. Stop listening to alpha/sigma bros, just go and have fun. Grift is all a lie.
I remember NixOS having thing bug while running in VM, but that was almost half a year ago. Can you see if it’s already present in the issues, and if not, create one? Others will appreciate this a lot.
Oh sorry, I should’ve mentioned why I hate RedHat. Well, I used to like it. Like is an understatement, I used to love them. Because I was one of those college grads who wanted to take part in RedHat’s Tev-Aviv program for the open-source AI and software stuff. I was so thankful and enthusiastic about contributing to Linux. And even though I was not selected, I would embrace their products, and related OSS projects - I ditched Ubuntu, and stayed with Fedora for almost four years, before I had a change of heart last September.
How US Big Tech supports Israel’s AI-powered genocide and apartheid
IBM’s Role in the Holocaust – What the New Documents Reveal
Genocide profiteer IBM wins big on EU funding
A Marriage Made in Hell: An Introduction to Microsoft’s Complicity in Apartheid and Genocide
I didn’t want to go on a political rant, but here we are. The world ain’t single-dimensional, chief. It is the culmination of every factor that makes me hate Fedora, Flatpak, systemd - am I forgetting something else? I hope not. Not every opposition to corporate support of open-source is some unhinged boomer rant about the good ol’ days of X11 and POSIX-compliant shell - well, I’m a Gen-Z kid, to begin with. I couldn’t give a rat’s ass about the advancement of open-source, if the cost is supporting another corporation responsible for the Holocaust, Nakba and Apartheid. Those injustices and deaths were avoidable. As someone from a former colony, I can not, and will not tolerate enabler of these atrocities.
The humans from the mid 1900s and early to mid 2000s are so fucking stupid, and had a drop in their IQ for the one for the sole reason that people before them knew they were fucked up and desperate, but these ones are totally delusional, unhinged and believe in propaganda like fact, and that they romanticize working as a cog in this manipulative, filth-ridden machinery. Also, fuck them for not doing anything to stop the evil corporates from polluting this planet.
I also have a similar vision. A miniature NAS/desktop, from where I can ssh to a light-weight, battery efficient laptop. And a modular, chonky Thinkpad-like cyberdeck with good battery, for on-the-move hacking. Localized compute unit, with the option to house multiple upgradable, System-on-a-Module may be a part of the modern smart-city home as a default , I’d guess?
To be honest, once Arm and RISC-V becomes mainstream, I’d probably play in low settings with a iGPU - matter of fact, I’ve been eyeing on the 780M for the same reason. GPU is cool, sure, but SoC and SoM is much convinient.
Not relevant to the topic in discussion, but I like the simple site design. Someone really needs to work on the long-ass page - at least limit to five blogs on main page and add the pagination in a separate blog page. Scrolling was a weird experience.
Librera can read PDF - there’s also a dark mode. The app isn’t the best looking, and the controls are unconventional, but you’ll get used to it.
You should help other help you. What I mean is, provide anything of substantial value to your difficulties - in your case, configs.
And your point being?
Please check this comment.
I’ve written about this here already.
Snaps are a default no, obviously. Most of the points by Flatkill still hold true to this day. Apart from that, I have my own set of disagreements which I’ll not be talking about - basically, stuff like reproducibility, storage space, inconsistent permissions, inconvenient configurations, outdated runtime - well, you get the point, so I’ll not be expanding on that.
My primary disillusionment towards Flatpak has to do with how people with shared backgrounds and vested corporate interests have taken over open-source - in this particular case, I am talking about Big Tech. It’s almost as if the space for a community-developed organization is hijacked by them - by them occupying core positions of the organization.
These organizations do not follow a horizontal approach to decision-making, they often come up with decisions without consulting folks that aren’t within their direct circle, and worst, when they’re held in a tight-spot, they can evade any criticism by appealing to authority - that they’re the maintainers/contributors, and they know what’s best for the project’s future.
The same is true about funding - it is always through members of the company that they’re indirectly funding these projects, that I can’t help but feel that the “community”, aka the outsiders never had the chance to be a part of the decision-making.
Flatpak may have it’s share of poor features that can be fixed - sand-boxing can be improved by using permissive containers that allow particular shell variables, installation will throw dialogue, informing the users beforehand about the permissions these apps will need, developers may be forced to use proper run-times, and perhaps, some of the runtime be eliminated to use system dependencies, thereby complying with storage compliance - I don’t know, but it could be fixed. But this invisible, unspoken flaw in the governance? No way.
With the largest group of people graduating with an engineering degree, you’re telling me they don’t use Linux? Just check the stats at NSF for the number of degrees awarded in S&E.
India alone has 14% in the desktop market share for Linux. China’s market share is not easy to tell, thanks to the firewall, but 90% of government computers use Kylin and other Chinese-developed distros.
Wrong, India and China has the highest number of engineering grads. From NSF:
India awarded 2.5 million S&E first university degrees in 2020, followed by China (2.0 million) and then by the United States (900,000).
With a younger population that is more than ever, a need for laptop would be in the highest demands. In fact, if you check the desktop market share for Linux in India, it is the highest, at around 14%.
Funny how it isn’t popular in countries with population several times larger than the USA. I guess every outside of the US can see through the bullshit of corporate-hijacked open-source.
This should give you all the feeds: https://cms.thewire.in/rss
People who waste food are the biggest losers.
In India, they’d have walked scotch-free. Well, have fun rotting in here.
There’s also Guix, which is a GNU software. To my understanding, most of us are anarchists. However, do be warned - Guix is lacking, compared to NixOS. I left NixOS because of their sponsorship by Anduril.