I pretty sure these people he doxxed are really proud of themselves, because an amerikkkan billionaire “noticed” them and is “fighting for their freedom of speech”.
Fuck Twitter and fuck Elon.
I pretty sure these people he doxxed are really proud of themselves, because an amerikkkan billionaire “noticed” them and is “fighting for their freedom of speech”.
Fuck Twitter and fuck Elon.
It was because of shit like this i blocked their entire instance; such a bunch of crybabies
I stand corrected. Thank you for your explanation
Well, yes, but are there Hebrew words for “Hamas” or “Biden”?
I was taught that you shouldn’t translate foreign names, only if the translation serves the purpose of clarification. For example: if I said I studied at USP, you probably wouldn’t get it; but if I said I studied at the São Paulo State University (USP), it would be explicit that I’m talking about a college.
Not OP, but Hebrew uses RTL system like the Arab language.
Mano, não sei se foi intencional ou não, mas aqui é uma instância internacional, meio que não vão interagir por não ser em inglês. Tem o [email protected] que é de uma instância 100% BR.
All hail the Scrap Queen!
Yeah, but there’s also the term “freeware”, which means closed source but free to use.
I’ll edit my comment for clarity, thanks for the heads up.
Projects leaching on the work of companies like that, “freeing the code”.
You mean it the other way, right? Because these companies you defend use the free labor of voluntary developers from the community, which spend hours and hours developing features, fixing bugs and what not, directly or indirectly. That’s how open source works.
When these companies change the project license to a closed source one, they’re basically saying a big “f*** you” to the community. Forking the latest open source version of the repository is nothing more than an effort to keep things the way they were.
huge companies will not pay a cent for Linux in the future
Linux is FOSS, you can do whatever you want with it as long as you redistribute it without modifying the license. Android does that; every GNU/Linux distribution does that. That’s how it works.
if a license says “you can use it for free, but need to share profits over x$”
What you’re describing is “freeware”, what this post is discussing is " open source software". There’s a giant gap between the two.
I think they mean EA Anti-Cheat, not Easy Anti-Cheat. The former, which is used in 2042, does not run under linux (and probably never will).
BFV runs out-of-the-box on linux systems and has a “Gold” rating on ProtonDB. If EA really goes on with this, BFV will become unplayable, just like 2042.
If the book title was “Kubernetes for Babies”, we’d probably get the same reaction
Shit Smoke, did the C.R.A.S.H. make you sell us out?
Well, as a Linux user myself, I used to do this kind of thing when I was getting started and was too damn hyped about FOSS and everything. Now, I simply ask people what they want from a computer and how much are they invested into tech.
Do you want things to be as simple as possible? Use Mac or Windows.
Do you want to learn more about how things work under the hood? Use Linux.
Gaming? Use Windows (and yes, although I’m a proud Proton user, some games just won’t work, like Valorant and PUBG).
Merry Christmas OP! I’ll pick Persona 5 Royal
Here’s what made me happy this year:
Happy holidays everyone
Snapper also uses btrfs subvolumes to create snapshots, so if you did create them during your installation process, nothing to worry about.
I don’t remember if there is a way to create them after the installation, neither if it’s a tough process tho. I used to simply reinstall when I messed up with the subvolumes.
“When education is not liberating, the dream of the opressed is to become the oppressor”
~ Paulo Freire
I’m currently using qBittorrent in “mixed mode” (clearnet + i2p), and honestly it’s amazing, even though there’s no current DHT implementation for i2p. Sure, you have to configure your client to automatically add the i2p trackers and everything, but it’s a huge step forward IMO.
I’ve also tested how one could “transfer” clearnet torrents to i2p and it went pretty well, even though you have to modify the original .torrent file to be accepted in some i2p trackers (I used postman tracker to test it, and they only accept torrents which all announce URLs are within i2p).
In general, I’ve found qBittorrent’s implementation pretty stable and suitable for day-to-day use, even though it lacks some features.
It’s not enabled in the 4.6 beta version, I think they’ll keep it that way
IMO, it means nothing. We have Felipe Neto and Pedro Certezas (famous Brazilian influencers, Felipe being the one with most followers in the country), who are also fans of Botafogo, and defend a progressive agenda.