Amazing. They put a screen on one side and cameras on the other!
What incredible things will they come up with next?
Amazing. They put a screen on one side and cameras on the other!
What incredible things will they come up with next?
Maybe you can just trim them!
I agree about that today, but it wasn’t always so easy to install linux for noobs as it is now.
And yet we still did it. From floppies.
Ubuntu’s role in the ecosystem is important.
I think it used to be. There’s still some inertia, but Canonical has used up a lot of goodwill through the years and other distributions have picked up the slack.
Nowadays I wouldn’t point a newcomer towards Ubuntu. It’s trash. Just use anything else.
I was very confused by all this (also I don’t use consoles unless you want to consider the Deck as one) until it dawned on me that what people are apparently now calling “disk drives” are apparently “optical disk drives/readers”.
Aren’t games dematerialised on consoles nowadays? Or is it strictly a PC thing?
Up to date and stable. Best of both worlds.
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.
Those will legally do pretty much anything depending on what cable you use anyway. (and what cable you end up using is pretty much a surprise until you’ve tested it.)
All thanks to USB making our lives more simple. (yay)
Ok, I suppose it is more simple in quite a few ways.
The phone has to go in the hat. It says so in the manual.
More characters than Ascii? Surely you must be mistaken.
Oooh, I’ve had that with some device. I think it was a camera or something like that. I’d forgotten about it. It took me ages to figure it out.
It’s always been for USeR binaries. It’s the first time I’ve seen this bizarre backronym (40 years of Unix here).
That’s what a ligature is. Combining two characters so they don’t clash.
Did they Google windows error messages?
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?)
It’s still a good habit to get into as this kind of thing could potentially bite you nastily if you ever end up on the wrong machine (which can happen).
I see you’ve been using apple cables. Other cables will absolutely last ten years or more.