FHS is an absolute dumpster fire that would never be dreamed up in this day and age
Regardless of how you interpret the statistics, I think that this is a sign that the long vexed problem of software distribution for Linux has been significantly improved. Not quite solved, but for most desktop apps this is fantastic news.
This is slightly unrelated, but I’ve been slowly moving to Linux from windows for a while. I haven’t made the full plunge yet, but here’s my biggest strategy:
Use as many apps on windows as you can on Linux.
I’m using Okular, Ghostwriter, Libreoffice, Cider, etc. every month or so, another app is moved across.
Then, I make the switch and all my apps are there as I’m used to them.
If you have the room, you can often buy these second hand for a bargain from colleges etc. They’re built like tanks and you can wash almost anything inside them. When they do break, laundry operators try to DIY so there are videos everywhere on how to do repairs.
Apparently grindr etc are banned in the athletes village. They’ll just have to do it the old fashioned way.
Phone etiquette for the 2020s:
Message:
Hi, I wanted to talk about X. I think it’ll take about 5-10 minutes. When would be a convenient time to call?
Phone calls themselves don’t annoy me. People who expect to call you at any time and then get upset you won’t drop what you’re doing to speak to them annoy me.
I’ve had success with Focalboard and noticed nobody is using it here! Should I look at alternatives?
Me: how many applications have you got installed? SimplyMepis: Yes.
Confidential projects, etc. amirite?
When I think of AI ruining humanity, this is how I picture it
Ooh will try thanks for the heads up!
Reading pages out loud has been an unexpected hit for me on the latest iOS. I’d love this in Firefox too.
I love the tiling interface. I haven’t touched it since they decided to start developing COSMIC though.
I’m gonna wait until they get everything up to date before I use it again.
“Welcome to the first day of the rest of your life”
Let the break it, and like other things in life, make (teach) them fix it if they want to keep using it.
When I was a kid I remember being confused at what the installation questions were.
If I were my own parent, I’d explain how the OS can sort itself (FHS, Windows, macOS). This gives confidence for installing and inspecting software.
Next, I’d explain how drives work and how they’re represented in different systems. That means partitions and formatting too.
That would then take me to explaining what’s involved in OS installs, erasing everything, dual booting, retaining personal files, etc.
I’m looking forward to the Pop! team getting this out so they can focus on getting the rest of their distro up to date.
There are some gaps in this video owing to the guy not knowing some different keyboard shortcuts in macOS and just assuming they don’t exist.
I’d say macOS is still more consistent than Linux but it certainly peaked in Snow Leopard.
So is this Oracle’s fault for over promising, council’s fault for not communicating its needs, or a lack of training/induction?
Thanks for the suggestion I’ll follow it up!