I guess it will make developers who develop the kernel and its components go “hehe fat penguin anyway let’s continue debugging this mess”
I guess it will make developers who develop the kernel and its components go “hehe fat penguin anyway let’s continue debugging this mess”
For starters you don’t have to worry about installing bluetooth stacks, or a network interface to control your wifi (if they somehow don’t end up installing a whole DE package group)
The only thing that could potentially degrade the battery is not cycling it. There should be no direct effect on the battery due to using mains power
It really whips the penguins ass
It is a checkbox in ubuntu. I don’t remember it being there for debian although I used it a few years ago so it might be a new change
Yeah but last time I checked I couldn’t play videos without enabling non-free repos
That reminds me…
I miss those Robert Baratheon memes from the freefolk sub
True for all programs
Not officially, you can install it separately but you’ll probably have to tie up some loose ends (haven’t tried)
You can look into Fedora if you want a good gnome experience or Debian if you prefer. The latter will have an old gnome version.
I think I get your explanation but I rarely see people in windows using fullscreen (videos and games don’t count ofc), windowed mode is the default so I don’t get the comment
What’s wrong with fullscreen?
I can’t imagine coding in a small window when you have the whole screen
In professional work space, ubuntu will probably be highest. Second place I would guess Fedora
As personal workstation I would guess arch (even without steam deck) followed by mint or some flavour of Ubuntu
With people* they aren’t physically near to
I think that’s the important part
Yeah I had hoped they would aim for a bigger market reach
There are many ideological reasons to hate ubuntu but I agree it was a solid choice and still is for people just wanting to get shit done without caring too much for the stuff underneath
I’ll check out the KDE flavour
I don’t drive but if the engine is off while the clutch is disengaged engaged wouldn’t that produce a braking effect. Maybe not enough to stop the roll on a slope but enough that normal foot braking would stop the vehicle?
I would say he’s arguing in favour of practicality
Looks like something an underpaid school teacher would whip up