It would be like calling FEMA ‘democrat run’ when talking about the latest hurricane recovery efforts. It is literally true, but it is not relevant. To add it would only serve an editorial purpose, not a factual one.
science and music. and beer. and dogs.
It would be like calling FEMA ‘democrat run’ when talking about the latest hurricane recovery efforts. It is literally true, but it is not relevant. To add it would only serve an editorial purpose, not a factual one.
an all-in-one app for running a Linux distro in a VM.
No, it won’t
let you run Linux apps on Android
It will let you run Linux apps in Linux
Libreoffice is not my first choice for document preparation, but I use it only because I need to collaborate with people who use MS Office. I’ve had no problems that weren’t easy to fix.
Did your computer serve you ads?
Linux doesnt. oot
Did your computer send an archive of everything you’ve been up to back to the parent comoany?
Linux doesnt. oot
Did your computer cost hundreds of dollars in software alone?
Linux doesnt. oot
Did your computer’s OS get an upgrade, but you can’t usr it because your hardware is"old?"
Linux doesnt. oot
Does your OS just generally suck?
Linux doesn’t! Ooot! Ooot!
So frustrating that their logo is a nice looking round watch, but their product is an ugly rectangular one.
Please don’t take this as one of the rude responses you refer to above - that is not my intent.
Why do you want to use Mint in the first place? The only thing that distinguishes Mint from any other Debian derivative, is that they have made all these software choices for you, and you don’t have to do anything to get your system ready for you to be productive. It’s aimed at folks who don’t want to think at all about any of the concerns you have about customizing.
If you don’t like the choices Mint has made, there is literally no reason to choose it. Start with a minimal version of Debian, and add whatever you want. The end result will be the same as starting with Mint and swapping things out. The only difference will be the address of your repositories.
If you can give a reference to any such book, I’d be very interested to see it.
Most of what you said is exactly my point. It’s true the word Linux, used properly, refers to a kernel and not an operating system. But that’s not the way the word is used in practice, and it is not what OP meant when they used it. They meant " an OS with the Linux kernel and GNU userspace utilities." When the word Linux is used that way, Android is not Linux.
they are operating systems that use the linux kernel, just like GNU/Linux (aka “Linux”) does.
kernel != operating system
For better or worse the more correct name GNU/Linux did not catch on and is universally shortened to Linux. Android uses the Linux kernel, but is not GNU/Linux, and therefore is not Linux.
This is a rare case where it matters that Linux is not an operating system.
Because of a different Lemmy post, I’m just now trying out Orgzly. It looks terrific so far, and I think it meets all your needs. It stores everything in plain text, so you just have to sync the text files.
edit: as noptys points out, Orgzly Revived is what you want to use (and what I meant to recommend).
Thanks for finding these. I couldn’t see them, so I assumed they were removed in response to the complaint.
You’re right, there doesn’t appear to be anything here to object to.
The complaint is not about the terms “systemd” and “segmentation fault.” Those are the titles of the affected artworks. Presumably the artworks themselves contain some trademarked property.
Also, this is utterly unrelated to patents.
I think it’s just /c/ instead of /r/
The fact that the reporting is lopsided does not mean both side are biased. The actual event can have been lopsided, and then one of the media sides is being impartial.
I’m not saying that’s what happened, I don’t know what “really” happened. Neither do you.