

Don’t expect it to work 100% of the time because it doesn’t. It’s not enough of an improvement (if it even is actually an improvement – debatable) for me to justify the extra electricity cost.


Don’t expect it to work 100% of the time because it doesn’t. It’s not enough of an improvement (if it even is actually an improvement – debatable) for me to justify the extra electricity cost.
That’s where viruses go to gain experience and level up. It’s like that vacuum chamber or whatever in that stupid kids anime. The viruses come out 9000x stronger
I’ve been taking online classes to try to get on your level


A kind lemming posted a mirror after your comment: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtfO9iCDrcM
Short and pretty funny/existentially terrifying imo
E: Should have linked contributor’s comment: https://slrpnk.net/comment/21579542
“They” probably are, I don’t know who “they” is but it’s definitely not Asus (at least not their upper-end stuff). Source: bought an Asus “gaming” laptop last year and installed Linux with no issues.
Edit: clarification on gaming laptop manufacturer (specified that it was Asus which I initially neglected to do in above comment)


How is the rest of the world supposed to track which acronyms you’ve heard of so we know which ones not to use?
This whole argument is as fucking stupid as Felon telling his engineers to stop using jargon.


In some countries you can call the uniformed officers of peace and let them know you’re having a problem and they’ll come out and shoot you. If they could teleport to my location they could solve a lot of my problems quite quickly


The key difference is, instead of your data winding up in an oppressive, kleptocratic surveillance state, it goes to the oppressive, kleptocratic adtech industry (dw, your data is also still sent to the oppressive, kleptocratic surveillance state,)
It is a reason, and a fine one. I certainly don’t pay for a subscription for my work stuff. I’ve told them we should have enterprise secrets management and shown them what that looks like. Not my problem anymore, and I have KeePassXC to handle everything I’m responsible for for work


I use one for work and the other for personal. They are both great, with slightly different convenience/security tradeoffs imo. Big fan of both, don’t know why it has to be one or the other for an OSS credentials manager
Edit: part of what you’re paying for with BW is first-class native apps


This is a great point. Plus we need to fight them for every inch of ground they try to take, no matter how inconsequential it may seem at the time (the pot isn’t boiling yet, but it’s getting hotter very quickly, it feels like)


I was going to say, thin clients are nothing new at all. And they’re already practicing with thin terminal deliveries with TVs these days
You’re not wrong, but we’re talking about pond scum here. I doubt there was much Seneca involved
I was thinking of DBZ lol