This but I don’t have time or knowledge.
This but I don’t have time or knowledge.
You can’t just install an arbitrary Linux distro on an Android tablet.
If you want to run Linux, buy something like the Juno or Librem tablets.
Someone at BuzzFeed is reading our Lemmy conversations:
https://www.buzzfeed.com/laurengarafano/the-hunger-games-characters-ai-vs-the-movies
Did you know that mastodons were relatively short? Despite being nearly 40% more massive than modern African elephants, the American Mastodon was 25% shorter on average!
Don’t be afraid to customize your install with YaST. You can add/remove packages before you do the installation.
You’ll need packman if you need restricted codecs for video.
Update with zypper dup
as a general rule.
It’s not a minimum before a check is issued. If you do not have a certain number of annual listeners on a track you never get paid out for it. If you had 100 tracks that were each streamed by 999 listeners who each streamed them 100 times per year every year, Spotify will no longer pay you a dime, ever.
I think a key point of confusion is in the way they presented it. They talk about how many songs have “less than 1000 listens” and that those would only make $3, but then their new policy is to deny payment for “less than 1000 listeners.” If each of those listeners streamed the song once per month, you’re talking closer to $40 than $3, and that’s on a per song basis.
The newest part, which is Spotify refusing to payout what small artists are owed if they don’t hit a certain streaming threshold, is 100% on Spotify.
For alternatives, Tidal allegedly pays better and at least doesn’t do this. Qobuz is not owned by any big tech company.
https://get.bandcamp.help/hc/en-us/articles/1500006084082-What-are-Bandcamp-s-fees-
They charge a 15% fee. So the artist (if independent) or record label (if not) gets 85% of whatever you pay.
I did, I cancelled Spotify and switched to Tidal because of this, and noted the reason in my exit survey.
It’s tricky because the data itself is going to be biased here. Think about it - even the video game is specifically called “Spider-Man Miles Morales” while the one with Peter Parker is just called “Spider-Man.”
Katniss is actually a good example. I was not aware of the details, but the books apparently describe her as having “olive skin”. The problem though is that if you image search her all you get is Jennifer Lawrence.
That said, Homer is yellow.
If a request is for a generic person, sure. But when the request is for a specific character, not really.
Like make one of the undefined arms black.
I love openSUSE and think it’s one of the few distros that has a pretty good implementation for every DE/WM. GNOME, KDE, Xfce, lxqt, enlightenment, mate, sway, etc… are all a solid experience on openSUSE.
That said, I have never found a distro with a good Cinnamon experience other than Linux Mint. Probably in part due to cinnamon being developed by mint, but regardless, if you want to use cinnamon, mint is your best option.
Xfce is my DE of choice. Hipdi support has gotten much better, though I’m using it on a 3200*1800 13" display so a simple 2x scale is all I need.
Xfce absolutely did not start as a project to “keep the old gnome style” since it was released 2 years before GNOME 1.0.
If you like Eternal Champion, check out…
The correct answer is “or are you dancer?”
By a strict definition, the kernel is what defines Linux.
Xfce does not get updated often, so by that definition it is the most stable.
It’s also pretty stable from the perspective of not crashing, but I can’t say I’ve had much trouble with KDE either.
I assume SSH is not exposed to the internet by default on openSUSE? I have not used SSH on my install so should I be safe if I just update?