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MyNameIsRichard
Posts
95
Comments
782
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • You get the whole experience including installing your necessary software

  • Easier install and a cromulent setup out of the box. It's why I went with Endeavour.

  • A face of bliss

  • I dunno, there's a tell-tail sign

  • On her first day, Anna is introduced to her supervisor, Puddles.

  • I tried PC/BSD on a desktop quite a few years ago and it was pretty good, apart from having to build a lot of my software from their ports tree. That ultimately put me off and I went back to Linux. I tried FreeBSD on an old laptop last year and no matter what I tried, I couldn't get it to recognize my Wifi adapter. I gave up after a couple of days.

    So, if your hardware is supported BSD is good, but if it's not than it's really not.

  • Flouncing off is about the drama of leaving, not the time served before doing so. You can be in a role for decades and then flounce off!

  • If you mean the drama I'm thinking off, that seemed to me to be a guy taking on a role that was always going to be 90% political because people are resistant, and sometimes downright hostile, to change and then flouncing off when it was 90% political.

  • Widgets and themes broke when version 6 was released but that was a major upgrade which changed the underlying technology (Qt5 to Qt6) and it was announced before-hand. It tends not happen with minor and patch updates.

  • The trick is to have a second keyboard

  • More money than sense

  • No one does comfy like cats

  • I disagree with you, I happen to think that the average person is intelligent enough to make an informed decision about their computing. They just have to forgo the learned helplessness that Microsoft and Apple have fostered since the early nineties.

    I don't think it's unreasonable for someone who is dissatisfied to try a few out. Let's be clear here, if you're satisfied, then you're not going to even think about moving but more and more people are becoming dissatisfied, you can tell by the number of people on Reddit (yes I still lurk Reddit) asking about switching. Also, unless you're really a geek, it isn't going to be close to a technical decision - it will be purely gut-feel. I like this one, I don't like that one.

  • It's more like buying a car. Try a few out and settle on the one you like. You can even try them out online at distrosea

  • There's certainly a learning curve as it's a completely different OS. That's going to take time for sure. The problem is that people are so used to Windows or Mac that they forget they had the same learning curve when they started with whichever one they're using.

  • It's the same process as choosing which loaf of bread you like, or which car. You try a few out and decide which one you like. It's not hard.

  • I wonder how these people function in a supermarket

  • If it's available over the internet, it's a target.