https://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/
At least Ubuntu makes it easy to roam through their archives. Have fun :)
https://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/
At least Ubuntu makes it easy to roam through their archives. Have fun :)
I currently use endeavourOS and I am happy with it, due to it being “just Arch with some wallpapers and optional extras”.
I am open for more though, even if it’s just for trying out :)
My journey was very uneven:
Windows (for many years) -> Ubuntu (for 2 months, dual-boot) -> Windows (for about 6 years, because of some very specific software + pre-Proton gaming) -> Linux Mint (for about a month) -> popOS (for almost a year) -> endeavourOS (now, but always on the look-out for new stuff)
But in between the “main” journey, there was always some stuff trying out, like Void (on an old PC), Arch (inside a VM, now use that VM as a lightweight environment for testing some stuff out)
It’s not really FOSS, just the software-equivalent of CC-BY-NC or CC-BY-NC-ND.
I fully agree. Why do I have to install gnome-tweaks just to make the UI usable?
That is the sole reason the UAC exists in post-Vista Windows.
Recommending Yandex? Bit of a “hot take”, don’t you think?
What a shame, as now it would be more needed than ever :c
But thank you for correcting me.
It is still required, as Google had to do the same with Android, offering multiple search engines and presenting them to the user (at least that happened to me with my phone), but after doing it in Windows 8.1, Microsoft probably thought that it was enough compliance to keep “those nagging EU politicians” away.
You can carbonate non-water drinks with anyone of those, regardless of brand - heck, Sodastream even sells you flavoured syrup to mix with your water.
Just, be careful to clean those nozzles more, as sugary drinks are sticky by nature.
Honestly, a better solution would be an open-source IODD-type device, because sometimes I still meet old devices which do boot via USB DVD drives, but not flash drives.
But Ventoy is a second solid choice, especially with newer devices, where such limitations are basically non-existent :)
I personally have tried FreeBSD and some FreeBSD “distros” on the desktop, and have used *BSD-based stuff as servers/single-purpose machines.
As a desktop system (user-centric use case), you notice how hardware support is sometimes problematic, especially on laptops. I personally had problems with NVIDIA GPUs, already a problem on Linux, being a big problem here as well, and don’t mention WiFi (FreeBSD doesn’t support 802.11ac and up currently) or Bluetooth. Software-wise, if your applications do not have a *BSD version, well, then you are relying on Linux ports, which for desktop use isn’t exactly great.
But, in servers/headless setups, *BSDs are shining, with the most important things running rock-solid, stable and resource-friendly.
Wait, they own Hermes? That explains quite a lot…
Isn’t it kinda sad that one has to rely on third-party articles to even understand the package manager/OS one wants to use?
Don’t worry, the next “mandatory” cumulative update will take care of that, even if you aren’t installing it yourself.
But isn’t that behavior actually documented in the Arch wiki? At least when you manually install it, it lists packagekit-qt6
as being “not recommended”.
It is, if your priorities are to tinker even more with your computer. (nix configs, etc.) :)
Using non-tech analogy, it is like having a “project car” to tinker with and a “daily driver” to get to and from work, if you are a car enthusiast.
I currently use Plasma 6 on both my laptop and my desktop, but XFCE has a special place in my heart, due to it being right in the middle between being lightweight with resources and still staying usable for a buffoon like me.
sadly not, but GPUs (at least those I used) do not support that over HDMI as well, which is kinda frustrating :/
That’s exactly it, Bazzite, a distro associated with gaming, running on hardware that even at release was criticized for being “landfill fodder”.