It is one of the mecha Tux wallpapers that were made for the Nobara distro. I believe I just grabbed it from inside KDE, but it has been a while.
It is one of the mecha Tux wallpapers that were made for the Nobara distro. I believe I just grabbed it from inside KDE, but it has been a while.
Yep. That’s the monitor screen - last legs at best. At the point where distro hopping is impossible because the main screen is unusable and I can’t even use GRUB anymore.
In your opinion, what is the most substantial change/addition slated for the megarelease?
I’m not defending this, but this is an extremely common practice in the US.
You forgot the pop-ups, forced midi music, easily injected malware, difficulty in verifying sources, html frames that frequently broke, the entire concept of needing a site map, fucking keywords, true banner ads that could force clicks with Javascript, and RealPlayer to name a few. I don’t miss it at all.
I had no idea that the Moonies owned this paper. That should completely deligitimize it to just about everyone.
This article is missing some stuff I’d really like to know. How long did this 1,000 km trip take? How often did they have to stop? What was the average range per day? All of the specs that would be great to know are missing here.
It was developed and abandoned, but The Rubicon comes to mind.
OpenVMS, obviously.
I have used privacy.com for this in the past. Don’t know if there are better options.
LinuxCNC is rock solid. I am a career machinist of 20 years and have used it to run work horse production machines without fault for years. Setting it up can be a nightmare, though. The fact that the distro is Debian based makes the reliability amazing, even after power outages etc. Just make sure you have a dedicated GPU or weirdness can happen.
OpenVMS is the way.
It is one of the mecha Tux wallpapers that were made for the Nobara distro. I believe I just grabbed it from inside KDE, but it has been a while.