I don’t know how it works in your market but here, the major hardware retailers will assemble your machine for an extra 80 euros or so.
I don’t know how it works in your market but here, the major hardware retailers will assemble your machine for an extra 80 euros or so.
Amazing. They put a screen on one side and cameras on the other!
What incredible things will they come up with next?
Nothing. But you never know…
Meanwhile in Europe:
How am I ever going to carry a couch on my bicycle? Haha, silly me. I don’t carry couches. (Or I’d just spend a whooping 80 euros to rent a van for a few hours)
Up to date and stable. Best of both worlds.
I boot windows once or twice a year so that I know what people are talking about regarding the latest version of the interface. I haven’t actually found a use for it in ages.
I’ve run OpenSuSE and then Tumbleweed for a while (as in years, now) on a variety of devices (including nVidia) with no real issues. It’s been by far the most solid of the distributions I’ve used since I started using Linux in the '90s.
But how’s the roblox integration?
More characters than Ascii? Surely you must be mistaken.
It’s always been for USeR binaries. It’s the first time I’ve seen this bizarre backronym (40 years of Unix here).
They aren’t close to cherry pits at all.
That’s what a ligature is. Combining two characters so they don’t clash.
Did they Google windows error messages?
You’re underestimating the cache.
There’s still some Mary Jane erasure going on here.
And it seems like nobody is using mary jane any more. There’s got to be a reason for that.
What happened to “Mary-Jane”? Wasn’t that in use for some time?
Commercial software compatibility has always been poor. It’s a classic way of locking users in.
A lot of people (regardless of age) have a very fuzzy idea (if at all) of what a file or a directory is. They wouldn’t know a operating system if it sat on their face.
The only way to get them to use Linux is to switch the system on their computers. And they’ll probably manage just fine(after a bit of initial grumpiness), since most interfaces are pretty much the same anyway.
But they’re never going to change on their own.
They’re in Linux now, it should show the shortcuts they’ll encounter everywhere. Not leftovers from another system.
But it’s got blockchain!
(does that actually still get any vc excited nowadays?)
That’s harder when playing plinky plonk though.