

You can grab that shell file and examine it. You can also check it out from their public git. I agree that this is bad practices, but not exactly uncommon.
You can grab that shell file and examine it. You can also check it out from their public git. I agree that this is bad practices, but not exactly uncommon.
Some people are recommending GIMP. It’s not bad for image editing. For image creation krita and Inkscape are amazing.
In the early 2000s, only my rich friends had cell phones. My roommate and I both had accounts on each other’s machines so we could telnet into them on the same local network.
We used to do this all the time to each other. It was funny to us 25 years ago. It’s still funny now.
Gnome with dash to dock and the app indicator extensions.
If Windows makes you happy keep using it. You owe a bunch of Linux nerds anything.
I mean if you want root, just buy an unlocked phone. You can run Lineage OS on the Pixel phones just fine. Full root access. This VM system has nothing to do with that.
If it’s anything like Chrome OS, you have full root in the VM.
I’ve been using Termux for years and there are a lot of nice things you can do. Also, a lot of nice tablets have good keyboards.
I’ve had no problems with LDAC. There is a free software LDAC decoder in Debian.
You should be able to pair them just like any Bluetooth audio device, providing your system has a Bluetooth radio chip in it. Most laptops made in the last 10 years do. I use my Redmi buds on my desktop and laptop without issue.
After enjoying the very local power of Ollama it seems weird to give OpenAI any money.
In the US a lot of business use them. It’s not uncommon to see a pallet of “old” ThinkPads at the swapmeet selling for less than $200. We’re talking x1 Carbons. These machines have upgradable SSDs, Wifi, and battery. For less than $300 you can get a BEAST of a machine that runs Linux very very well.
Open source file manager Material Files lets you set an SSH server as a bookmark and mount it instantly. Moving files around just like like it’s native. Works seamlessly through Tailscale.