I vote for political parties that are explicitly against facial recognition when possible (always a small party that nobody knows). I use cash.
I vote for political parties that are explicitly against facial recognition when possible (always a small party that nobody knows). I use cash.
Libretube works for me, but not Tubular.
He wants to try before accepting the deal.
I don’t know if there exists such a thing as GrapheneOS account, but it is not required. You can add Google, Facebook or other accounts like with regular Android. I use a self hosted Nextcloud instance to synchronize contacts and calendar with DavX5 app. GrapheneOS has built-in apps. I use most of them. For the app stores I mostly use Fdroid and Aurora store for non open source software. I don’t use Google play store even sandboxed because I don’t accept the terms of use, mostly because they have the right to uninstall apps from your phone without consent or notice.
Like Windows, Ubuntu is installed by default on many computers. In my university, all the computers have a dual boot Ubuntu Windows.
Glad to see you use cash. It’s often forgotten in privacy advice, despite being one of the most importants.
I think my first donation would be to GrapheneOS.
A few years ago, I’ve read an article where the journalists investigated this. They asked to Facebook it they actually do it and Facebook confirmed.
But it’s clear that Google has a history of building products with RSS and killing the RSS support once it’s established a user base.
Not only RSS. It was the same with XMPP, and probably other things I don’t remember now. Better don’t rely on Google products.
The announcer (the enterprise on the ad) pays to the advertising platform (for example Google) which gives a small amount to the site displaying the ad.
Is it part of the apps that have been recently sold to a commercial company? If so, you have to uninstall it and download the “Fossify” equivalent to keep the open source version.
The argument that Debian doesn’t have the latest packages is only valid for stable repository, right?
Wouldn’t Debian with unstable or testing repo be better than Linux Mint?
I don’t like Ubuntu because of their forcing method to use Snap package manager.
I don’t like Manjaro because of its poor dependency management. Many dependencies are not declared, so that if you update a package, it won’t update the undeclared dependency and it won’t work any longer. You have to update everything or nothing, and when disk space becomes low, updating everything at once is impossible.
A better advice would be: Don’t install updates when you have a class to attend and assignments to do. There is always a risk of breaking something on any OS.
I learned to program at the same time I learned English. I learned the words if, then, else and while in this context.
In some countries, you need an ID to buy a sim card, so it’s linked to your identity, even if you pay cash.