Hear hear! Glad someone recognizes we’re not all barbarians who wreck anything we touch
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crazycaveman@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•Nothing beats that sobering tasteEnglish
1·2 years agoifconfig is good enough for me!
crazycaveman@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Linux@lemmy.ml•KDE Goes and Does It (Double-Click By Default, That Is) - OMG! LinuxEnglish
71·2 years agoThere’s a symbol at the top left of the file or directory icon to select the item rather than open. It’s stays there even if you have double click to open
crazycaveman@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
News@lemmy.world•Extremists Call for ‘Civil War’ and ‘Secession’ Over Texas Border RulingEnglish
81·2 years agoIt needs a catchy name, maybe something like “Texit?” Get that on the ballot, see what happens
crazycaveman@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•And Tigger Too - Danby Draws ComicsEnglish
16·2 years agoTheir tops are made out of rubber, their bottoms are made out of springs!
crazycaveman@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•I am THIS close to joining the Chromium monopoly gangEnglish
2·2 years agoI just got Tumbleweed set up on my laptop after trying Fedora for a bit. Funnily enough, the thing that made me check it out is CentOS 7 coming up on end of life and needing to find a new distro to switch to for servers. Obviously, would use Leap on the server side, but the rolling release cadence of Tumbleweed was very appealing (have used Arch in the past, but had trouble keeping up with it…). Still feel like I am only using a fraction of what I can with it, though
crazycaveman@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Long term OpenSuSE users, how has your experience been?English
5·3 years agoI’m interested in hearing about this from others, too. I’m in the middle of finding the next distro for my work now that centos 7 is reaching EoL. OpenSuSE is looking appealing (maybe because it’s completely new to me), using leap of course, but I’ve setup tumbleweed in WSL and am planning to set it up to dual boot and use it as my primary OS. Based on what I know, it wouldn’t be “better” than Arch, just a different way of managing updates. Tumbleweed is all automated for packaging and preparing updates, so the same issues that happen with AUR could also creep in to tumbleweed (I assume). One of the prices to pay for bleeding edge rolling releases
No, I’m not. Chromium doesn’t exist in Windows unless you install a program that includes it. Chromium web engine is “native” to the chromium web browser, not to any OS (except maybe ChromeOS). As espi mentioned, Internet explorer’s mshtml is the only engine “native” to Windows. Just look at the Opera browser, they changed web engines from Presto to chromium; that’s not using “what’s native to the platform” (Opera works across all OS’s with chromium, except for iOS for the restriction I mentioned before), it’s using what the developers/company want to use to render their pages. Nothing in Windows itself provides any of the chromium engine “pieces”
Chromium isn’t native to Windows. iOS is the only OS (I’m aware of) where browsers are forced to use a specific engine, but even that will be changing

Loving the notes you put to yourself. Don’t see how this is relevant to !worldnews@lemmy.world however