You can combine both widget toolkits in one app‽
[He/Him, Nosist, Touch typist, Enthusiast, Superuser impostorist, keen-eyed humorist, endeavourOS shillist, kotlin useist, wonderful bastard, professinal pedant miser]
Stuped person says stuped things, people boom
Maybe migrating to kbin.melroy.org
You can combine both widget toolkits in one app‽
🤯
It’s not just torrenting. Every user chooses what files they share, and these would be visible in search (and ranked by an internet speed transfer estimate), which makes discoverability a whole lot easier. If you want to download it, a direct transfer is initiated between that user and you computer only. You can also browse all files that a user has shared and chat with them about problems and whatnot (there also are chat rooms). Plus, since it’s not really torrenting apart from the concept, your download history isn’t targeted by popular tools that check out your activity on public trackers.
Soulseek
Only if you completely disregard the userland and impound the definition of Linux to the kernel base
Users don’t contribute builds. They contribute a specification file for how the build is made, which through the AUR is downloaded and executed. You can see the package source for every AUR package, and most AUR helpers make you look at the specification file by default.
New packages on flathub are moderated, though I haven’t encountered any problems from AUR’s moderation model either other than it sometimes being slow but harmful stuff is removed pretty fast
I think that’s a Manjarno problem.
I think they want you to talk about the other aspects of use, such as compatibility with hardware an whether there can be significant productivity roadblocks. (That said, the only said roadblock I’ve met is not being able to project and not being able to run a specific Android app)
Flatpaks are isolated while I want to use my input method. Plus, they have larger sizes which can pile up over time
The installation process has been pretty simple since archinstall and endeavourOS. The “sometimes” happens rarely, and the forums and mailing lists are pretty helpful.
The only times when an update broke a lot of stuff for me is 1. The infamous grub update which never happened again 2. Thunderbird dropped GTK support, not an Arch problem 3. I didn’t update for quite a while and had to do package replacements, which were automated by the package manager but was scary 4. Budgie and GNOME conflicted with each other. Weren’t very significant
You can buy a normal (or better yet, English-International) keyboard without the Windows key without confusing yourself with new layout conventions.
Maybe try tapping on the text?
(note, the GitLab Enterprise Edition, which is provided to the public on gitlab.com, is (like GitHub) trade-secret, proprietary, vendor-lock-in software)
Isn’t EE source-available but proprietary? Plus if you just use the free tier you’re not using any enterprise features
Why is it a fiddle
People make formulas (packages) and extensions in Ruby for it.
Homebrew
You could 1. download some virtual machine thing and install Linux 2. download build tools and build from source 3. see below
Anyways, all of this may be more suited for searching on r/LegacyJailbreak.
I think you’re confused. There is no warning letter, that’s just the takedown notice sent at the same time as the takedown.