

Number 2 for me. And it’s noticeable. I’d love to use it, but I just can’t ignore the performance difference.
Number 2 for me. And it’s noticeable. I’d love to use it, but I just can’t ignore the performance difference.
Why are people saying this is a hypersurveillance dystopian nightmare? Guys, you are still in public! The only difference between this and having police officers sitting there and looking is this is much cheaper and more efficient. The recordings are still being sent to a human being for review.
Should really be using the “! link”, not URLs. While both work on mobile apps, on the web version the URL redirects to the community’s instance.
There is also Epson EcoTank. No cartriges. Just fill it up with Ink. And also no shady stuff like this,
It worked for me too. @[email protected] maybe you need to install mono
.
Looks awesome! Quick question: How did you make the curb on the roundabout?
I don’t know what you mean.
Shows up fine on sopuli.xyz
I’m just going to point out that technically a “Boulevard” should be a combination of Car lanes, wide pavements and bike lanes, separated by vegetation/trees.
Here’s the thing with Arch-based distros: they aren’t more stable than Arch, and Arch breaks. Fixing Arch is often possible, but requires Terminal skills. You mentioned you want Arch because of the AUR, why not try Distrobox? It’s a tool for integrating containers (and their apps) with the “base” system. With a few commands, create an Arch container, then just use your favourite AUR wrapper (like yay
or pacman
) as you would on a regular Arch system and you may need to run `distrobox-export ’ in the container. Your apps will just show up like any other apps.
Yeah, as long as we will still have people creating instances (for new people) this seems to be the way.
Yup, thats what I tried doing.
Unpatchable
Good to hear
Btw, they released it as an extension.
Well GNOME is the most polished, which means it eneded up being the most popular, which means GTK has the most apps, which makes GNOME look very polished, and the cycle repeats itself.
Also the vast majority of people use laptops, not desktops.
GNOME has some quite strict design guidelines (a “vision”, if you will). And sticking to that a vision has enabled them to create a very polished DE (probably the most polished DE on Linux). What people get wrong is that GNOME wasn’t really made for desktops. It was made for mobile devices (laptops, tablets, and in the future phones). Using GNOME on a “proper” mobile device really makes sense. No, that doesn’t mean using a laptop connected to an external monitor all the time, or just using it at a desk all the time. It means using a laptop as a laptops, going out and about, using it without a mouse and using it with it’s internal display.
Google announced it is partnering with Apple
That’s a thing I never thought I’d hear
I guess e-bikes are more expensive.
Yup. I tried Sync and Thunder but both felt sluggish compared to Connect.
Thanks!