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2 yr. ago

  • The town of Chimney Rock is gone.

    No hyperbole.

    It's gone.

  • Ubuntu was a successful attempt to make Debian user-friendly. If you don't remember Linux in 2003, it took a lot of time to configure.

    Ubuntu came along and did everything automatically from first install. Some of the polish it had was things like smooth fonts, a GUI installer, automatically detecting your monitor resolution, setting up sound automatically, and automatic downloading of firmware needed to make your hardware work. In just one reboot after install, you had a usable system that looked really nice, with smooth fonts.

    In 2024, Debian already does all of this out of the box. The value add of Ubuntu is minimal. Ubuntu provides a theme, a splash screen when booting up, a custom font, and a modified version of the Dash to Dock extension that you can just download yourself from the Gnome extension site. That's it. One might argue that snaps make Ubuntu worse than Debian.

    Just use Debian. If you want a somewhat more polished system (nice cursors, unique icons, easy to configure animations), there is Mint Debian edition.

    It takes less time to just set up Debian to look and behave like Ubuntu (about 10 minutes) than it takes to continually fight against Ubuntu snaps.

    Just use Debian.

  • That thread is just the result of a search today to see if the situation has changed.

    When I tried it, we were still trying to figure out how the two displays worked. It looks like that link has a solution. It would have been great to try back then, but I wouldn't go out and buy a 5k iMac or LG monitor just to try it out now.

  • About 25 years ago, I used something called mlvwm which was designed to look like System 7.

    I ran this on a 486 and later on a Duron system with something called "bochs" that let me run a full System 7 in a container.

    A quick search shows that it is still around and has been forked by a couple of people.

  • First mover advantage works against new housing too.

    Like, you as a small retail consumer in your twenties, move to a place that you really can't afford. You find a way to buy a condo/house/apartment and tie up 90% of your net worth and expenses to that new place. You scrap by on other expenses like transportation and food and clothing, but you find a way to make it work.

    Because of supply and demand and no new places being built, the price of your place increases 3x in the next decade even though you didn't do anything to improve it.

    Your net worth increased almost that much (depending on how much you paid down towards principal) and now you can leverage that "home valuation" to borrow against and buy more things. Maybe even use it for a down payment on another condo. But you are going to do it because you are in your 30's now and tired of living the simple life of a pauper. You need things. You need cash flow. You DESERVE it.

    Now you, a small retail consumer, are aligned with big real estate because you don't want new housing to come in and drive down the net worth that you borrowed against to live a better life. So you would be more susceptible to voting against housing density projects, and you would be outspoken about keeping the "charm" and "character" of your quaint little neighborhood.

    Rinse and repeat for 75 years and this is the result.

  • Mighty Morphin Power Rangers

    Deep Space Nine

    Nova

  • Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

    LOTR: The Two Towers

    Primer

    Antitrust

    Hackers

    Star Trek: TMP

    Scarface

    Hot Tub Time Machine

  • X1 Nano:

    • narrower than the old 11.6 laptops and slightly taller.
    • Higher than 1080 screen due to the taller ratio.
    • IPS display
    • 0.97kg without charger.
    • Thinkpad keyboard and track point.
    • strong Linux support

    Here is the PSREF for the first generation. They are up to Gen 3 of this line now.

  • I was too young for most of TNG but stuck with TNG sometime in season 6. I was a kid with single digit age when they destroyed the Enterprise D in the movie and it really messed with me. Then I grew up watching the entirety of DS9 and Voyager, and outgrew it by the end of VOY. Strange New Worlds pulled me back in as an adult.

  • Agree; Gnome on Fedora is just more polished in general than Gnome anywhere else. So sasy to add another language and that input language works everywhere including Flatpak apps Qt apps, etc. Fedora is winning me over in this regard and I've kind of been a Red Hat hater these days.

    • Pwm flicker should be regulated on all LED devices, from smartphones to household bulbs and car turn signals.
    • Price displayed is exactly what you pay. With tax, no credit card or smartphone surcharge or "cash discount"
    • Tip screen on POS cash registers is displayed before you swipe/tap your card, not afterward.
  • The theme to Star Trek IV. Underrated.

    Also like the Klingon theme.

  • After 26 years of using Linux, I did my first baremetal "immutable" distro install last week.

    My youngest son is starting school and instead of the Chromebooks that they recommend, I took a chance and installed Fedora Silverblue on a $200 Lenovo "student-rugged" class laptop. Everything works and he hasn't had any issues so far. He gets access to the same student platform as the other students through Chrome, but then I can install Minetest and Tux Paint and GCompris as well.

    The older kids run Debian stable for years now, but if this works out, I might transition them over next semester.

  • I love the old Mac Pros and even built a trashcan setup for Debian a few years ago. But TBH, they use a lot of electricity for the processing power they provide. If you already have one or can get one for free, great, use it. Linux runs great. But I wouldn't go to OWC and buy something that would be outperformed by a fanless, low TDP machine these days.