

Gnome makes no sense anyway, this is just another example.
Gnome makes no sense anyway, this is just another example.
I like your reply more than the 5g conspiracy theory one.
Put two spaces at the end of the line, then newline with ‘enter’.
(\(\
( ‘x’)
(“)(”)
(>‘o’)> does anybody still
or am I just old? <(‘o’<)
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Get out of my head, lol. I do this as well.
Of course it fell apart. All these people do is lie, cheat, steal, and so on…
Social rules are made up by neurotypicals. I never signed a contract to be governed by them.
Nothing in life is easy.
If you’re unhappy about the lack of crackers worth a damn, you could always learn to do it yourself.
No DRM exists which can’t be circumvented one way or another given enough time.
It’s absolutely fine to put your pirate hat on when they do this kind of thing.
Are you discriminating because lil’ tree is lil’? /s
Prove them wrong. Most who loudly proclaim themselves christians, if not all, are more comfortable claiming “Jesus is King” rather than living as He wants them to. They point their fingers at others, spout hatred, and kill in the name of their Lord, rather than help solve poverty, healing the sick, and breaking bread with their neighbours. The billionaire “christians” even try all they can to impose their rigid worldview upon the world, and are (or are indistinguishable from) fascists. The mere existence of them is an affront to the teachings of Jesus Christ; He would throw them out of their temple in disgust. Prove them wrong by ousting these people as the false prophets they are rather than let your children fall to their toxic masculinity, discrimination, and classism.
Fedora was very excited in a February article and Debian, Ubuntu, and other distros have installer images for RISC-V. With the open source and cheaper architecture compared to x86, support for it will only snowball now. There are also x86 emulators for RISC-V systems, which might perhaps bridge the gap where support is not yet native?
Linux doesn’t necessarily require an x86 (CISC) instruction set; it also runs on ARM (RISC) devices. https://www.androidauthority.com/arm-vs-x86-key-differences-explained-568718/
Both of those examples use electricity.
I’m not sure this is the right question. Shouldn’t it be what hardware is not supported by Linux? Most of the time it’s the Linux (kernel) developers who create the drivers for hardware support since companies still seem of the opinion that they only need to support Windows, with some exceptions to the rule?
Am I mistaken in this?