Well, the second I clock out I’ll stop thinking about how to solve a coding problem for work.
(Instead I’ll start thinking about how to solve a coding problem for a never to be finished hobby project.)
Well, the second I clock out I’ll stop thinking about how to solve a coding problem for work.
(Instead I’ll start thinking about how to solve a coding problem for a never to be finished hobby project.)
It looks really good, but the script is bafflingly bad. Add to that some bits of completely out-of-place humor, flat characters and a lot of very cliche plot points…
Hm… But different distros have different philosophies (not just) about updates. That’s part of why people choose a specific distro.
Theres still plenty speaking against flatpak (larger sizes, problems with GTK/qt themes, and it’s only meant for GUI applications - you still need a separate system for the kernel and lower-level/cli tools. And frankly, that makes flatpak unusable to me, because the purpose of a centralized package management system is not having duplicate systems).
So in short: y’all are gonna pry pacman from my cold, dead hand.
Sorry, but you’re plain wrong on your first issue. Getting all your packages from one source is one of the biggest upsides of Linux.
Do you seriously think advertisers buy each user’s data individually, and sometimes Google goes “oh hey guys just a heads up, that individual is using an ad blocker 👍🏼”?