3.5 GB disk space required? I’ll just look out the window, thanks.
or… is it?
Like anything else, can be, depending on your needs.
It’s not Voyager’s fault, Lemmy has always promoted dead and abandoned communties as “trending”. The grouping is useless and can always be safely ignored.
On desktop, I use an ad blocker to hide the div.
I disagree but we’ll revisit the conversation in a decade as I added the task to my calendar so I’ll talk to you in 2034.
The senators were not the ones that exposed anything.
I understand your goal now. Unfortunately, I’m unable to help, hopefully someone on the community knows the answer and can help. Very best of luck!
As a result I have to disable RFP for my site (or just be annoyed all the time), and I guess I’ll have to advise my users to do the same.
Is there any reason you can’t change your keybinds to something other than CTRL+combo? You explained it’s to keep from interfering with other common binds but there’s still a ton available to you when taking those into account.
It’s your hill to die on but I wouldn’t make my website usability dependent on a browser that is so rarely seen.
Could you tell me what would be lacking? There’s a surprising amount of bells and whistle s you can add to the setup. Check out bunsenlabs distro for an example.
It looks like its goal is to make everything less comfortable, not more.
I love OB with tint2 and conky , no de needed.
Doubtful that it will be for us, we’re fairly well insulated from the goings on around us, income/Bureaucracy wise.
Not only am I embarrassed by the US and it’s inhabitants, my family has been planning an international move for some time. Once we are no longer caring for the elders in the family, we will make our exit stage right.
And if that’s the case, your comment means nothing.
That’s not very socialist of you.
24546982
What a great ad.
Which is why I said “linux as a whole”. Many distros will try to undo the nerdery and neckbeardism that is built into the parent distros but as a whole, linux is going to always be less welcoming to a new user than someone that’s used to useless warnings and repeated password entries for elevated privileges. Being safer and being new-user-friendly rarely go hand in hand.
Yes but surely you’re aware that even the most new-user-friendly distros and their tools aren’t necessarily aimed at new users.
That warning is a perfect example of how Linux developers choose which hill to die on. They post a warning for an app that everyone knows can deliver bad times to two camps of users; those that know and don’t care and those that don’t understand the warning. If we could quantify the helpfulness of that warning, odds are that it saved 0 users from malicious action from that avenue of attack.
Never expect Linux as a whole to be “helpful” to the new crowd.