It’s had all the signs of a bubble for the last few years.
It’s had all the signs of a bubble for the last few years.
Gnome with dash to dock and the app indicator extensions.
If Windows makes you happy keep using it. You owe a bunch of Linux nerds anything.
I mean if you want root, just buy an unlocked phone. You can run Lineage OS on the Pixel phones just fine. Full root access. This VM system has nothing to do with that.
If it’s anything like Chrome OS, you have full root in the VM.
I’ve been using Termux for years and there are a lot of nice things you can do. Also, a lot of nice tablets have good keyboards.
I’ve had no problems with LDAC. There is a free software LDAC decoder in Debian.
You should be able to pair them just like any Bluetooth audio device, providing your system has a Bluetooth radio chip in it. Most laptops made in the last 10 years do. I use my Redmi buds on my desktop and laptop without issue.
Even scarier when you realize Friday the 13th is on a Sunday.
It’s also worth mentioning that the VPN in question, Proton, offers one of the best free tiers of any VPN company.
As long as you have notepad, you’re good.
I’m not going to condone this, but also… haha.
Nope. Just the regular kind.
I’m a YouTube creator, part of the partner program, and I also manually upload to TILvids. The videos I make generate about $100-$300 a year through the partner program, so I’m not a professional by any means. It feels like they’re trying to keep creators from leaving by putting up small roadblocks that limit our reach beyond the platform. Given PeerTube’s non-profit model, I see it as a potential future for content sharing. Though there are a few rock stars on YouTube, most of the creators on that platform make little to no money from publishing videos. There are more people like me than Linus Media Group.
Hot take: Good for them.
This will have zero impact on 99% of independent developers. Most small companies can move to an alternative or roll their own infrastructure. This will only really impact large corporations. I’m all for corporation-on-corporation violence. Let them fight.
Keep in mind that though this is a blow to the industry, it’s not like optical media is just yet dead. Hell, there are still new releases to DVDs coming out today.
Their static website hosting is probably the best in the business. We seriously need some competition though.
I can still use a 2003 AMD Opteron with the newest builds of Linux. It’s an open standard. As long as the hardware still physically works. The only reason these pieces of hardware are EOL is because they chose to lock them down.