If your graphics card isn’t a NVIDIA you would be fine with Wayland since months.
If your graphics card isn’t a NVIDIA you would be fine with Wayland since months.
Debian testing enters the room
No. You could update to debian testing. But also there it will arrive in late summer.
Debian is not made for having always the latest desktop environments. You should consider something like arch if you want to have the bleeding edge.
You saying the code quality of some of my colleagues is even worse on their personal projects? o_O
Use. Firefox. Now!
As long as loose coupling, and separation of concerns are well tinkered into your application you minimise risks of breaking everything on a restructuring.
If you have for example shared state leaking everywhere into the program, your most probably doomed on the slitest changes.
I am not saying you’re wrong, but there are ways to mitigate the risks even without knowing what will happen in the future.
Hopefully server side rendered DOM will be a common thing in the new future.
deleted by creator
Canonical needs it to monetize Ubuntu.
The users? They don’t
Ubuntu > Sabayon > mint > Arch > Mandriva > CentOS > Debian testing & Arch ( just the best ones )
I would not call Android a Linux. It may have the kernel but it isn’t much GNU in it
Yes and no. I did build several in-house enterprise applications and for this I know about this problem. And yes you’re right, a lot of the complicated contexts are more complex than searching on Google.
But! Enterprise software architects have a tendency to make every feature as visible, and also making the apps as feature rich as possible. This comes with high costs.
I always try to establish a strive with exactly what google delivers.
Cage the user in his first decision, Filter or action and then show him or her the application with all the features feasible in the chosen context. It is amazing how complexity reduced most of these applications are when you just ask this first question.
It is. I like Linux exactly because I trust the packages from the distribution. Everything else is an attack vector and untrusted
Edit: you install random binaries from the internet? Oo
Op neither likes people decided to not kill animals nor people using community driven distributions.
You could have used the original meme. The mindset matches
What could be wrong with random foreign executables in your system?
Should be straight forward. If you willing to do all the work, the Debian community should be very welcoming
Eventually, yes. It may be faster available if you contribute on maintaining the packages, though.
You can debootstrap your debian yourself. It’s not the same as arch but even more configurable
Swap on S3. That’s brutal
ESUS OS?