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1
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176
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • That's because they don't have to let you do that and mostly it's counterproductive to let you do that.

    A prime example for a cookie with "legitimate interest" is a session cookie. Your shopping cart or even staying logged in wouldn't work without it, so it's not a good idea to even give the user the choice.

    Legitimate basically means "needed for the function of what you're trying to do on that website", so ads are not it, but session cookies are. Everything in between is up for debate. (Usage tracking etc.)

  • How do you have 25 upvotes? Everything you wrote is wrong.

    Linus said, that the rust infrastructure is not stable, is positive about AIs future and happy, that NVIDIA had to step up their open source game.

    And even the interviewer mentioned, that the "I only care about the kernel" quote WILL be taken out of context.

    And he answered even implied questions...

  • Linux is a tool. And I find that the best way to learn handling a new tool is making a project with it.

    A book is (maybe) fine, but a project will help you use your knoweldge while you gain it.

    So set up a Lemmy/Minetest/Matrix/Teamspeak server or write a bash script to change your audio output device/volume or program a simple bot in your favorite programming language or mix some music or gather a bunch of PDFs and search through them and concatenate them

    And while you do that and create directories, change permissions, move files, create users or "cat" or "grep" or "sed" stuff, find out, what every single line you write in a terminal does. And instead of using a graphical program to move files, shutdown your PC or update all programs, only use the command line.

    This will help you in the long run.

  • Two years ago I wanted to build a custom keyboard. The cost 350 and a 3D printer + filament cost 200, the rest about 60-70...

    So yes, it was worth it. Also I regularly print stuff now, which is just a net positive at this point.