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This is not a subscription but a perpetual license and for my needs it’s already well worth the price they are asking. Using this actively with my wife but also sharing albums with about 8 other family members.
I find the no-subscription model very attractive and I’m open minded to companies trying out new software licensing approaches. I like the idea of the developers getting paid for their good work and being able to do it full time.
This just means that this project is still too early in development for you. The breaking changes happening in this phase are going to pay off in the long run and prevent the project from getting bogged down.
I would give it another shot when they release v2
I read it as sarcasm
I was in those masses. They sent me a free CD in the mail when I was a teenager!
Sometimes I use Drawing for adding some annotations but I mostly just paste directly from the screenshot tool.
In terms of editing, I work more with SVG where I use a very simple editor BoxySVG.
Yea, none of those things matter to me.
Don’t get me wrong, I’ve had plenty of fun customizing DEs but I don’t really need that on my daily driver. I also have more of a terminal based workflow so perhaps shell customization scratches that itch for me.
To each their own :)
One man’s “basic” things are another man’s clutter …
I personally also put Pydantic on the S tier.
Also, I use (geo)pandas on a regular basis and when it comes to geometric operations Shapely is an amazing library.
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Did you ever find the missing packets?
That’s nice, I think I’ll switch from Firefox ESR on Debian!
You could package it and install with pipx
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Crunchbang (#!) linux breathed live into some very wimpy hardware I’ve had in the past.
Loved the minimalism.
In my student years, I always ran with Xubuntu on a used thinkpad.
Although I’m a gnome guy these days, I still need Thunar as my default file manager. It’s nearly perfect…
I run Debian with gnome, headless and raspi and love it.
Used Ubuntu for years, also had a good time and still respect the project even though it deviated from my needs.
Sometimes I’ll boot up something new just to poke around but I’m happy sticking with Debian for the time being.
Desktop: Macintosh (<X) -> Windows (XP-10) w/occasional Ubuntu dual-boot (various DEs) -> Debian + Gnome
Server: Ubuntu LTS -> Debian
I’ve also had a number of used thinkpads over the years where I mostly ran Xubuntu and crunchbang.
I still boot into Windows every month or so if I need to model something in Rhino (CAD). Couldn’t get it working in Wine and my 12 YO computer isn’t performant enough to run it in a VM. The last thread remaining and waiting to be cut…
I plan to pay for Immich
The only thing I really miss is CAD software for working with BREPs, I wish there was Rhino for Linux. However, I can do like 99% of projects in OpenSCAD.