

I don’t understand. You will still need to do administrative tasks once in a while so it isn’t really unnecessary, and if root can’t be logged in, that will mean you will have to use sudo instead, which could be an attack vector just as su.
I don’t understand. You will still need to do administrative tasks once in a while so it isn’t really unnecessary, and if root can’t be logged in, that will mean you will have to use sudo instead, which could be an attack vector just as su.
It doesn’t wrap in the default web interface.
The first two panels remind me of this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fisherman_and_His_Wife
Windows also uses linefeeds, they just also add carriage returns.
That’s w3m, an Emacs web browser, not webm the WebM file format.
Between IRC and the picture representing the idea of self-hosting, there’s the XMPP logo, which like IRC, is an instant messaging protocol (but with more features than IRC).
The FSF-approved distributions that are shown are: Trisquel, Parabola and GNU Guix (this one is actually quite neat, it’s based on NixOS with its own ideas like the importance of being able to bootstrap an entire system from a minimal binary seed)
The browser with logo shown is GNU IceCat, with binary blobs removed and with some extra security and privacy features (among them an addon that prevents the browser from running proprietary javascript)
lynx is a simple TUI web browser and w3m also is a similar browser but running in GNU Emacs
The last three are all the GNU Emacs logo.
I’ve been wondering why not window.chrome == true
or Boolean(window.chrome)
, but it turns out that the former doesn’t work and that ==
has essentially no use unless you remember some completely arbitrary rules, and that JS developers would complain that the latter is too long given the fact that I’ve seen javascript code using !0
for true and !1
for false, instead of just true
and false
because they can save 2 to 3 characters that way.
Why the double negation?
It looks like Seitan. At least that’s what my seitan looked like when I made some once.
I discovered this post from my All feed, not from hexbear, if that’s what you are implying.
Why are you all believing this obvious piece of false information?
I always considered making the ice cubes and using them to have water on the rocks to be too much effort for very little benefit.
The huge differentiator is that KDE may look like windows OOTB on most distros, but if you want you can easily make it look like Gnome, Mac, Unity… whatever. The panels and menus are infinitely configurable.
Is there a way to configure the look of all the apps running on kde? Because one of the main things that keeps my away from KDE is how ugly all the k* apps look out of the box.
I actually like Gnome. I like the way it looks and I have no problems with UX. I also don’t feel the need to use any extensions.
¯\_(‘_’)_/¯
Oh to see a medieval peasant’s face after reading them this headline.
Maybe because Ukraine isn’t going to “win” any time soon or easily as you believe?
Bots are the ones running the show here too though.
Is this about hexbear and lemmygrad? These accusations have never made sense to me. They have been here long before it became popular and they had the same opinions back then. It makes no sense and is a waste of resources to have bunch of bots posting stuff when there is no one to read those posts.
a shovel produces the same amount of use-value whether it is sold for $5 or $25
Not disagreeing with anything you said, but use-value is a qualitative property of a commodity, not quantitative, so we can’t speak of an “amount of use-value”, AFAIK.
What if you don’t have a static IP, do you ask your ISP in what range their public addresses fall?