I’ve seen this enough times that I laughed without watching it. Funny stuff.
I’ve seen this enough times that I laughed without watching it. Funny stuff.
Alpine, mainly. It’s not bad on desktop.
Pepperidge Farm remembers
Fair point
Okay, that’s scary. I’m not a target by many stretches, but this is pretty serious.
For anyone who (unlike me, who hasn’t started yet) has completed some kind of qualification in cybersecurity: would it be better to use Faraday rooms/cages, or to revert to pen and paper (with old-fashioned cryptography, if necessary)?
However, this guy has actually switched to Linux, and is willing to adapt and learn how to use it.
As many as necessary, really. The only reason they start getting removed is because of the risk of infection and stuff being higher than the risk of complications with the surgery after a certain point.
It’s complicated, subjective, and probably varies country-to-country.
It’s more that there’s a higher risk of complications if they remove the old kidneys. However, they do start taking them out if you’ve had more than two transplants.
POV: you actually listened when that guy told everyone on Lemmy.ml to move to Lemmygrad a few years back
Well, GrapheneOs is a bit easier. GOS uses a WebUSB installer, which does a lot of the work for you.
LineageOS requires things like ADB and Fastboot. In my case, however, it was a Samsung device, so I had to install Windows and then mess around with Odin.
I also ended up soft-bricking the device by trying to sideload the OS before it had finished downloading.
Well, you can still get pretty far with GrapheneOS. Pixels can be re-locked, which is a feature I wish all Android devices had.
It seems to be running well on my Galaxy Tab A7. Definitely better than One UI or whatever it came with.
Soft-bricked
I mean soft-bricked. I fixed it, but it made things more difficult.
(Archive.is link used because FT is paywalled)
Nothing. There are just a lot of people in my Mastodon circle who use things like OpenBSD.
It also seems to be a popular OS to try and use during this year’s Old Computer Challenge.
I wouldn’t be surprised if even Tartarus doesn’t want him.
I had to double-check to make sure; but no, it isn’t.
rms
’ Hurd kernel), or even a BSD (which does not use the Linux kernel).