Same. I’m a little embarrassed that I have little idea what it’s like. Last one I used daily was Windows 7. But then I wonder
how convenient it all was and how was missing so many things
What are these things I’m missing?
Same. I’m a little embarrassed that I have little idea what it’s like. Last one I used daily was Windows 7. But then I wonder
how convenient it all was and how was missing so many things
What are these things I’m missing?
I feel like this is well named (run as user 0) so then I’m wondering what else you dislike and what you think would be improvements?
What about a lightweight variant like Lubuntu or Xubuntu? 4Gb should be usable for a lot of things.
We can’t imagine anything but unfettered capitalism, so onward we go to our own destruction!
But our ignorant misconceptions are ubiquitous so they have become truth!
What problems with AMD Ryzen? I’ve been happy with them, except one that had excessive power drain on suspend.
My guess at the stance is I’d imagine it’s that switching away from snaps is switching away from Ubuntu’s support and security monitoring and updates to some less known/reliable/diligent third party?
Popey (Alan Pope) used to work for Canonical / Ubuntu, so he’s presumably not inclined to jump on the bandwagon of Canonical/Ubuntu/snap hate since he knows a lot of Canonical and Ubuntu people and their motivations and work. Not that there aren’t good reasons to criticize snap or other Canonical decisions, but it’s also plain that a lot of people just join a hate bandwagon and don’t even know what about it they object to. There is masses of wrong-headed criticism of Canonical out there e.g. I’ve frequently seen people criticize creating Upstart, saying Canonical should have used systemd, or bzr vs git! Presumably these people were annoyed at Canonical for not inventing a time machine.
Shush! Lennart might hear you!
Well lvm makes a shit filesystem and btrfs is useless at volume management.
That was the point they were making. GitHub is to git as the snap store is to snap, albeit there are existing alternatives to GitHub.
You don’t execute C source files. They have to be compiled.
First point as someone else commented, that driver is already present in any mainstream kernel. It’s very unlikely you have any need to build it.
But if you really want to build it the command will be
make
that will get instructions from Makefile on how to build the driver. But there will be other tools and libraries needed.