- 3 Posts
- 22 Comments
more like the triple point of two rabbits
(it does not exist, sadly)
turnipjs@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Looking for a distribution that I could replicate from one computer to another2·9 months agodeleted by creator
SQUARE CUBE LAW MENTIONED
My feet are somewhat average, perhaps a bit bigger than average and my girthiest boots (in my estimation) could hold no more than like 5L combined. Certainly not 9L each.
I assume they meant conservative, not fascist.
test:
e: you can link them directly
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.01.17.576074v1.full.pdf
TL;DR: Eyes with lighter color irises have better low light performance in at least some circumstances.
reincarcinisation (clickity clack, crusty comrade)
turnipjs@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Noob Question Thread: Ask Any Questions About Linux!11·10 months agoYear of mobile linux
[ astronauts meme ]
Always has been
turnipjs@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Noob Question Thread: Ask Any Questions About Linux!12·10 months agoYou should try NixOS, it’s pretty cool.
Furries weren’t invented yet when the dinosaurs were still alive.
But also any crystal used in a clock is a time crystal.
Who wants to start a flame war? NixOS is a better bleeding edge distro than Arch. Nixpkgs has way more packages than Arch.
turnipjs@lemmy.mlto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Ladybird Browser Team Selects Swift as Preferred Language27·11 months agoThat… is not a restriction on freedom 3. You could complain about your inability to use the rust name for anything you want but that is not the same thing as your ability to distribute modified versions of the software. It is also fairly standard practice for foss software to restrict the use of such trademarks. For example, Gnome does pretty much the same thin. FreeBSD as well. Libre Office also has similar restrictions, although they are defined more nebulously. It is not clear to me what usages are allowed with the Linux trademark but they certainly do restrict who can use it and for what and you must get permission before using it. See also, about trademarks in FOSS: https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=9d96e1bf-bced-48f7-b5b4-ee561e7a9348
The software is free. The trademarks are not. The four freedoms are about the software and not about trademarks. You could fork Rust and call it Corrosion, just like people have forked Firefox and called it Waterfox.
Damn, you signed up on pi day? Pretty on brand, I suppose.