Not really, it just assumes that the Linux user has a girlfriend who's promiscuous. It's just a joke. That said, I am a male Linux user and my wife and I are poly, so it's extra funny to me.
I'm never gonna own a home, I can't afford to care for my parents. A nursing home is absolutely out of the question if I'm the one on the hook. It's hard to imagine it being easier in India with the work conditions and wages there.
If it's someone who doesn't really matter to you that much just tell them to shut up and go away. Life's too short to waste time on bullshit from idiots. Not really an argument worth addressing.
That's fair. I definitely think taking a defector from NK 100% at face value is naive. It's difficult to know exactly what happens there, but the stories Park tells are hilarious in their absurdity so it's easier to see and poke fun at.
Not sure how credible this guy's story is, but if he's telling the truth about his position then he probably knows more than Park does. That doesn't mean everything he says is true, though.
From my very basic understanding (I have only been using Linux since December), AppImages are single-file executables (kind of like a portable application) whereas Flatpaks are somewhat "distro-agnostic" packages that are sandboxed by default. They're sort of different ways of trying to solve the cross-distribution compatibility issue.
I like Flatpak better on desktop just because it's sandboxed and creates a menu entry automatically. It's generally easier to update a Flatpak too, but a dev could implement an auto-updater in an AppImage release if they wanted to. IMO, when a Flatpak isn't available, AppImages are fine, and you can extract the files from them with the --appimage-extract argument if you want to see what's in there or edit a config.
Yeonmi Park is a notable North Korean defector who routinely goes on talk shows to spout absolutely batshit crazy stuff about how backwards it is there. It's commonly understood that she essentially just lies for money and clout.
The commenter is implying this headline is fake news.
Mindustry is one of the only games that runs well on my old Android tablet from 2017. Great way to kill some time, even if I'm too dumb to build it up all complicated-like.
Why do you feel entitled to not have to pay for your dog's quarantine? You own the dog and are responsible for its care and health, and if you're traveling or immigrating you should have money to spare simply because those actions require considerable savings.
Do you also feel like your passport and birth certificate should be free?
It'd be cooler if we had more trains, but I'm down for cheaper EVs in general.
I just wish it was easier for renters to find a place to charge because that's the largest barrier to my family getting one. Also we have relatives a few hours away that we visit fairly often, maybe once a month, and there's only one charger on the route (and it's sort of out of the way).
I hate to break it to you, but a lot of other countries already have policies like this for public health and environmental reasons, and the cost and quarantine arrangements always fall on the owner.
They probably either keep it in quarantine and then send it to the pound or put the dog down, unfortunately, if the owner isn't able to prove that the dog is healthy enough to enter the country. Unless they decide to cancel the trip and go back where they came from.
She might adjust to LibreOffice, it borrows heavily from the MS Office UI. I think it's also available on Windows if she wants to try it before switching. Sims 4 works great on Linux too.
Local stores are more likely to get their product from reputable suppliers (yes, this varies) - on Amazon, you're buying from whoever unless you specifically seek out an official store, if it exists. Also, Fluke has been posting about counterfeits for years; here is a post from 6 months ago, which would suggest it's an ongoing issue.
Here is a 2021 post from Electrician Talk about electricians receiving multimeters that don't ohm out correctly (kind of a big fucking deal). Additionally, if you buy products on Amazon from an unauthorized seller, even if the product works fine the warranty is generally void.
Edit: Also, to be pedantic, a multimeter isn't an electrical safety device; I'm using that term to refer to protective devices like fuses, GFCIs, AFCIs, breakers, thermal overloads, etc.
I think that assumes that a person's attractiveness to a passive observer is equivalent to their attractiveness to their long-term partner. Someone who loves you probably thinks it's cute when your hair is messy, for example.
If you fall out of love, yeah, maybe leave your boyfriend. But if you still love him despite his beer gut and bald patch, maybe that's not a bad thing? Also, all relationships happen on a timeline, lol.
So then why do they think that they must support every distribution? You would think they would jump on the chance to switch to Flatpak. The reasoning is ultimately pretty poor, so hopefully this isn't a shitty cover for some other decision like layoffs.
I straight up wouldn't trust Amazon for any electrical safety device. Go to a hardware store or parts distributor.
Even a surge protector from a reputable brand could be suspect - Amazon lets counterfeit products on the storefront all the time, and most sellers barely list any specifications on product pages.
Not really, it just assumes that the Linux user has a girlfriend who's promiscuous. It's just a joke. That said, I am a male Linux user and my wife and I are poly, so it's extra funny to me.