Microsoft is just a bug.
Microsoft is just a bug.
I would pat a cat-sized plush antlion instead.
I don’t really care about his opinion opinion, but maybe nazis will listen.
Alarm clock sound.
So it goes in a wrong direction from the start.
No. I can’t remember when Linux used to be a conservative swamp driven by pure nostalgia.
Shattered Pixel Dungeon is a perfect game for girls. And yes, you can care for pets there.
Will it become as successful as Trust Social?
The state won’t save you.
It is not like ‘very limited’. But generally they are focused around modern Intel CPU, and can have issues on new AMD CPU. And it won’t work on very old CPUs without proper virtualization features.
https://www.qubes-os.org/hcl/ can hint on what Qubes will work better.
Also see the system requirements: https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/system-requirements/
Probably, yes. Qubes AppVMs don’t run the whole DE inside it. Also, Qubes uses automatic memory balancing for VMs, so users doesn’t need to care about it much.
Yes, they should ideally. But it’s hard to properly implement them in a way that will guarantee anonymity and be sybil-resistant at the same time.
I’m not. And I won’t be with another either.
An offtopic but federation is not working on fedia.io right now.
Oh, it is annoying part of GNU/Linux that there is no way to override /usr/share/* resources system-wide. It is possible to do for each user by placing files into ~/.local/share but not for the system.
As I have been using Silverblue for enough time, I would say that splitting between the base OS and the apps is an important thing but atomicity/immutability of the base system is not so much.
For example: I also use QubesOS and it gives quite immutable-like experience while the base distro is a regular non-atomic Fedora.
By using flatpaks (or snaps) or tools like distrobox on a regular distro you will get a similar experience.
The main think is to cut dependencies between apps and the os and to be able to update them independently.
And then, when you have the apps separated, there are just not many reasons against choosing an immutable distro for the base system because it gives you additional bonus things as safe updates and rollbacks. But you can use a non-immutable distro as well if you want a specific or a niche distro (for example Chimera Linux or Alpine).
But the majority of distros provides it as a default choice. FF for Linux is like Edge for Windows.
It’s not much about the donation. Actually Russia now are hunting for people with American and European citizenship for future swaps.
Right now statcounter shows:
Firefox: 2.74% Linux: 1.61%
Probably they want to become a part of the Russian world one day.