very nice analogy. I’m stealing it.
very nice analogy. I’m stealing it.
That is why Microsoft spent a total of gazillion dollars to have its OS pre-installed on all PCs. We need more PCs with Linux pre-installed. This should be an antitrust issue but I am not knowledgeable enough to say how.
But, and there is a big BUT here, you can’t copy someone elses brand. You can’t put someone elses name on it and sell a product without asking for permission first.
Yes. That is also how I see it. Plagiarism is immoral, copying/replicating/altering is just natural. Has been the norm for millenia. That’s how art, science, and engineering, frankly, the entirity of human culture developed.
easy there champion. you’ll pop a blood vessel.
not Linux but some open-source software with premium features that have menu items with diamond icons or something like that pointing to those features. you cannot hide the menu items and it keeps sending you notifications to subscribe to an annual license.
that’s what I was trying to say.
touch file && chmod +x file
is good but this here is the one true command for the purpose.
As many people have already said, just do what you need to do. That’s the best way to learn. But if you are afraid you’ll break your system with dangerous commands, use docker or a virtual machine for practice.
Apenix
And this sounds like nix for apes 🐵
exact point is probably empty. so much of matter is just empty space.
Also the most correct :)
Humans vibrate the air in different and complicated ways. One vibration pattern humans like, another vibration pattern they don’t like. sure this “speech” thing is really complicated. also symbols squibbled on surfaces. language, am I right?
You are the one true scotsman
And that’s why you also surround it with double quotes.
Moules-Frites and Hoegaarden.
If you start seeing canaries everywhere in your coal mine, chances are you have a lethal gas leak. wait what?
I have a 2011 MacBook pro with Arch Linux on it as part of my make shift homelab. It’s a good feeling to revive these things.
Turkish military uses Pardus, a Turkish Linux distro, but I’m not sure to what extent.