What makes you say that specifically?
What makes you say that specifically?
Just speculation, but Deepin?
In case of the modem I know it doesn’t need to be signed. In fact, there exists an open source firmware for it.
I see, but which components do you mean specifically?
What firmware do you mean?
Exciting to see! Positively surprised Alpine is modular enough to make this feasible/maintainable.
Curious to see what the part about SystemD and musl at the end meant.
As far as I understand this issue, removing the current remote and then adding it back as normal user should work?
Obviously? Who would just give you stuff when you’re not even employed 😂😂
I don’t know about that. During my job interview, I requested that (with the necessary politeness) and it wasn’t weird. I accepted the offer and now work daily on a GNU+Linux machine. It’s nice.
But AOSP is open source? So that term wouldn’t improve on the problem.
I think GNU phones or GNU-like phones is a nice way to put it.
This is the first time I heard of Ethernet over HDMI and I can’t tell if you’re joking.
And yes, money sucks in general but in the present time under present conditions I might have to shop online. Current payment methods suck.
For others who wonder the same: the announcement is from the 19th this month and they licensed it under Apache 2.0.
This is really cool to see! I hope they are testing the waters for releasing the source engine as free software. I remember Gabe Newell stating that they would consider it if people were interested. Doesn’t have to mean anything, but a woman can dream~
I heard of Chimera multiple times now, but everytime I look into it it doesn’t seem to be more interesting and useful than say Alpine.
Do you have any write-ups about the security advantages of Chimera Linux?
This is how you upgrade from Debian 11 to Debian 12: https://www.debian.org/releases/bookworm/amd64/release-notes/ch-upgrading.en.html
While this is a great and thorough guide for sys admins, people who just want their 'puter will be unable to follow. Ubuntu has a tool for this called “do-release-upgrade” iirc.
But it doesn’t do any custom upgrade steps? For a correct upgrade, you need to follow Debian’s manual. Otherwise you will break things afaik
This isn’t the point of the review. Verified apps only say this is the application as offered by the original vendor.
If the original vendor were to bundle malware, then that’s a bad vendor, but still verified official software. Not that I actually think this will happen. Most user install malware such as Discord willingly. /j
Sleeping on it: major version upgrades. In Debian there’s no automatic way to do it as far as I know?
For people with little technical experience, this could be a substantial hurdle or even problem.
I am strictly speaking about user experience here. If something goes wrong with snaps, solutions are harder to find than traditional ways of installing software. I don’t think most users care about the underlying systems otherwise.
Which packages do you mean?