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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)GA
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2 yr. ago

  • Crimea IS Ukrain territory according to any paty except Vladimir Putin, you can't just "steal" parts of a country and legally pwn it! How dso you imagine they will they recapture without their ship drones, it's a fuckinnng half island and yes he did turn it off despite his bs that he never enabled it because Ukraine already used it before. I don't know what kind of contract they have but you are more than just a little delusional with that comment!

  • Well, low orbid satelites don't really burn in space, they are designed to fall towards earth and burn up before they reach us in case they ever dtop moving, there are evwn videos that look like metrior showers but it's acrually a bunch of Starlik satelites!

  • 5G is cool but absolutely horrible for that purpose, the lains it uses are able to transfer a lot of data but only over very short distances so for remote areas you are probably better off with LTE or something even weaker, it's a tough question to answer but I think we can all agree that the answer shouldn't be owned by a single company, it's critical infrastrtucture for both living and military activities!

  • A few days ago he disabled starlink in the Crimea because he apparently doesn't view that as part of the War and with that inderectly part of Ukraine, he claimed that he never enabled it there later on but Ukraine used it before so that's a lie and he didn't back down from thing stupid garbage ether! :/

  • I admire your effort but there are a lot of people in the open source community and especially on Lemmy that just don't want to understand it, I try not to argue with them but they are fucking everywhere with their trashtalking of various amazing open source projects!

  • I prefer vanilla Gnome on Fedora too but Mint dose some things really well. Their update manager is nice but that's a Debian tool, their file manager (Nemo) on the other hand is something I still use, I just prefer it to Nautilus.

  • We never lost any "ild system" and the rebooting is probably how your distro implements updates, I use Fedora so mine often wants a reboot but that's definitely not the norm on Linux as far as I know and I never had a device turn back on on it's own...

  • It depends on the distro I am on, if I use Debian or a derivative I usually prefer the Flatpak but on Fedora I only go with the Flatpak if I run into issues or the rare outdated package because I don't need them, I would certainly miss Flatpaks if they didn't exist tho!

  • The GUIs do that in a even easier way for new users and experienced people can always just add a simple bash alias, a universal command never existed anyway because we have various different package managers on different distros so I don't see any lost feature whatsoever tbh

  • Apple intentionally builds their devices to not be repaied, there is a BIG difference in technical constraints because of a lack of space and intentional decisions like sothered SSDs with a swap partition (RAM overflow on the storage drive that causes tons of writes) by default or a special storage architectures that has no benefit over existing solutions except that noone can buy replacments. It's not like you need a bulky Laptop for user servicable parts ether, the Framework Laptop isn't the thinest on the market but it's certainly not bulky and if even a small startup can achive that imagine what amazing devices Apple could build if they invested a tiny bit of their money in repairability, and if it's just the part they currently invest in to the opposite!