Sandboxing proprietary apps and containerising their outdated dependencies is a good thing.
Sandboxing proprietary apps and containerising their outdated dependencies is a good thing.
I’d love to do that with vim for :!q to :q! And :qw to :wq
Mint is goat
Remember to make a backup pipeline with Timeshift and you’ll be fine
Before upgrading, users are expected to visit the Arch Linux home page to check the latest news, or alternatively subscribe to the RSS feed or the arch-announce mailing list. When updates require out-of-the-ordinary user intervention (more than what can be handled simply by following the instructions given by pacman), an appropriate news post will be made.
“Arch” they just need to read the newsletter before updating.
They’re all shitty clevo laptops
Alpine Linux enters the chat
I was indeed expecting a doctor who reference
Flatpaks are as sandboxed as the sandbox settings you give them, check out if the defaults are satisfactory on Flatseal before running it.
Call it homework, everybody knows what it really is and nobody will look into it
I’d rather have YAML than the mindfuck of a language nix uses
Did you know Java runs on 1 billion devices?
The second actually works with oled monitors
5k display and you’ll never have to deal with fractional pixels again.
Nor is every thigh high sock user trans.
Yes the built in browser sandboxes the website code, but the nodejs part has full freedom to encrypt your stuff and ask for bitcoin ransoms or ai scrape your browser history for better user profiling. YMMV