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It was a kde update centre which is installed by default and suggests updates when they’re available. But zypper was also failing.
Several months ago I installed Tumbleweed on a VM just for kicks and giggles. A week later it refused to install updates at all due to some weird conflict, even though the system was vanilla to the goddamn wallpaper. In a week I try upgrading and magically the conflict is gone. I’ll be honest, this was my only experience with Tumbleweed and it managed to have its update system broken in the meantime. I’ve never had anything close to this on Debian Unstable lol.
Not hating on Tumbleweed, on the contrary - I have been testing it for quite a while to see if it’s as good as they say. But it doesn’t look like a middle ground between Arch and Debian. At least in my short experience.
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I still don’t understand who the fuck asked for such a feature.
Tabliss. In my case it’s just an empty page with “good morning” or whatever text depending on the current time of day.
I am more than sure that Linus wrote the original message as he would normally do, and then made it clean and pretty with an AI. Sometimes I resort to this option too.
Sometimes an open source project is too niche for anyone to take notice. I myself am developing a networking reliability layer ported from C to modern C++ and I’ve yet to see a person use it except yours truly. Sad truth.
This. Open source apps are generally awful at presenting themselves to a broader audience.
Even for me, who’s technical enough, an app being FOSS is not enough to even bother checking out. Yes, I’ve said it. Sorry, tinfoils, but I do put features above else. And, want it or not, general public does the same: if the featureset is not clear enough at first glance, and an app doesn’t explicitly provide clarity on what it does and how it is better than competition, most people aren’t even checking it out.
Generally because Sync for Reddit died (api bs and shit) and Sync for Lemmy was one of the first results that caught my eye looking for a working client. Haven’t looked back since.
Good reminder. Subbed to patreon
I started playing Immortals Of Aveum before watching any final review of the game. Finished it and then watched the reviews.
Honestly, loved the game, and the reviews seemed to be negative from the get-go with the main point of having “nothing particularly new”. Yeah probably but that doesn’t make the game bad lol. It was actually fun and engaging, at least to me.
I stopped trusting reviewers long time ago and just watching em for kicks and giggles. Everyone has a different taste and that’s okay.
I would sincerely advocate for year.month or year.release model so that typical users can figure out how outdated their software is. An average person is usually terrible at keeping software up to date.
I’ll be honest with ya, no fucking clue which of them is smaller or not.
Isn’t there a browser extension to prevent exactly that? Like, “Allow right click”?
I compare it to qip or similar with voice calling support about 10 years ago. But still, Slack loses to pretty much anything on the market regarding performance, be that Element, Telegram, Skype or even Discord. It literally battles with biggest IDEs lol
Slack is one of those apps which lags in a week on any hardware, it might be better than web version but it still sucks ass compared to fucking ICQ clients. Source: using it in the company I work for, for about 7 years already.
GPU-fucking-accelerated terminal emulator. Damn, what an age to live in.
Smells like they might be preparing to make their own portable console running Android.