jman6495 5mo ago • 100%
A modern UI for ClamAV or a Subsonic Music Streaming client (In gtk4)
jman6495 5mo ago • 100%
Des milkshake. C'est qu'on a fait au Royaume-Uni. Ca marche plutôt bien
jman6495 7mo ago • 50%
My recommendation would be Fedora or CentOS if you want a stable workstation you won't have to reinstall. Debian is also a great choice. OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is okay but I found it a little clunky compared to the others. Avoid EndevourOS and Manjaro like the plague.
jman6495 7mo ago • 100%
Vinegar, Lemon juice and warm water.
jman6495 7mo ago • 95%
Using it as an adjective in some cases is fine, never use it as a noun, unfortunately due to assholes using it that way it now has a negative conotation.
jman6495 9mo ago • 100%
Reading this gave me an aneurism
jman6495 10mo ago • 95%
But to shoot down other counties aircraft over Gaza would be to make the political statement that it is their airspace, which Is unacceptable
jman6495 10mo ago • 95%
Gaza is not Israeli airspace.
jman6495 10mo ago • 96%
Don't take down your Christmas lights (inside at least). Make hot chocolate at home, create rituals for yourself
jman6495 10mo ago • 100%
I spent half the day in the bomb shelter and the other half losing at cards.
jman6495 11mo ago • 75%
Yep, we will, because it is in our interest. It is also in the US's interest, but unfortunately some are too short sighted to see this.
jman6495 11mo ago • 95%
The EU (and it's member states) have sent almost double the amount of funding the US has.
https://www.ifw-kiel.de/topics/war-against-ukraine/ukraine-support-tracker/
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
This article sounds extremely fishy and borderline conspiracy-like to me.
Imho the only guarantee of privacy I need is the source code.
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
Yes, but if you intend to mainly use flatpak you might want to try fedora Silverblue
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
No, you can't : in an immutable distro I can reasonably trace almost any file in the filesystem back to the package that created it, and know with a reasonable degree of certainty that the installed version of said file has not been tampered with. That isn't possible an a normal distro.
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
Please do share with me what I do not understand.
A mostly read only filesystem built from a limited number of packages, with other files being in a fixed number of locations mean it is harder for malware to hide.
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
Very good choice :D
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
I used to daily drive arch, until university, when I got frustrated at the issues it caused me and the time I needed to solve them.
I'd recommend fedora if you want real solid stability.
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
I don't think the DE itself matters, but I can recommend using an immutable OS (makes it harder to install malware) and installing flatpak apps only. You can also use software like flatseal to further lock down permissions
jman6495 11mo ago • 100%
Perhaps basil with the tomatoes?
Yesterday, the traditionally highly conservative legal affairs committee voted to end geo-blocking of films and series in some limited contexts. It's a tectonic shift from the previous position of the legal affairs committee, and comes ahead of today's vote in the more progressive Internal Market & Consumer protection, where MEPs will call for a gradual abolition of geo-blocking.
Yesterday, the traditionally highly conservative legal affairs committee voted to end geo-blocking of films and series in some limited contexts. It's a tectonic shift from the previous position of the legal affairs committee, and comes ahead of today's vote in the more progressive Internal Market & Consumer protection, where MEPs will call for a gradual abolition of geo-blocking.
Yesterday, the traditionally highly conservative legal affairs committee voted to end geo-blocking of films and series in some limited contexts. It's a tectonic shift from the previous position of the legal affairs committee, and comes ahead of today's vote in the more progressive Internal Market & Consumer protection, where MEPs will call for a gradual abolition of geo-blocking.
Yesterday, the traditionally highly conservative legal affairs committee voted to end geo-blocking of films and series in some limited contexts. It's a tectonic shift from the previous position of the legal affairs committee, and comes ahead of today's vote in the more progressive Internal Market & Consumer protection, where MEPs will call for a gradual abolition of geo-blocking.