

- I’d try it
- Why on earth would they capitalize snake case like that


Same for me. I distro-hopped for about 20 years with OpenSuse, Ubuntu, Debian, Arch and Fedora being the most memorable desktop setups for me. While all that was a valuable experience, NixOS feels like graduation.
For the Nix-curious: I wish someone would have told me not to bother with the classic config and build a flake-based system immediately. They’re “experimental” in name only, very stable and super useful in practice.
It’s a good idea in theory, but it’s a challenging concept to have to explain to immigration officials at the airport.


A study in my hometown found that shopkeepers are mostly concerned about their own commute, not decrease of patrons.
What’s more, they require you to periodically log in on your phone. If you exclusively use the desktop client, you will get a message that access will be blocked if you don’t sign in on your phone.
I feel you.
Signal still centrally collects metadata and requires a phone number to participate.
If you’re serious about privacy, ESPECIALLY if you’re part of a group looking to organize in a clandestine fashion, you should look into the vastly superior SimpleX Chat.
Not sure if this is indended or not, but the somewhat controversial mother tree hypothesis stipulates exactly this – trees borrowing carbohydrates (sugar) from neighbors via mycorrhizal networks.
I agree it’s very confusing. There’s this GitHub issue that goes a bit into the differences. If you don’t have any special requirements, I’d probably try the wine-wayland package first.
There’s probably many different ways to achieve this but I would probably use a shell (zsh or fish) that does this by default
Big fan of both fzf and tmux!
That’s what I actually use (and ctrl-r also quite a bit), but up arrow for the meme


Take a lot of time researching content management systems / frameworks. Consider hosting and licensing costs, tech stack, user / customer preference. Avoid lock-ins.


That’s great! I feel the same way. With Windows it was always, “OMG why can’t this just work”, but with Linux it’s more like, “hm, I bet I can figure this out.”
(Also, you can already contribute to FOSS by filing good bug reports and improving documentation, no programming needed.)


Stalin will take your lunch money
You’re right about the location, my mistake. I never said it was photoshopped. I still think that vandalism is the obvious explanation here.
Is it, though?
It’s actually vanilla milk, picture is accurate