I think Tblock should do what you’re asking for.
be gay do crime
I think Tblock should do what you’re asking for.
I took psychic damage just from seeing both of their names in a headline together
This photo doesn’t even look real lol, Elon looks like he’s photoshopped in
IoT is supported until January 2032, while standard LTSC is only supported until January 2027, which only, like, an extra year or so of support over regular Windows 10. I’ve never heard anything about IoT being less secure but I’m far from being an expert lol.
and then everyone clapped
deleted by creator
Am I having a stroke, or is this headline horrendously written?
This. I swear, some people in the FOSS community seem to be convinced everyone who uses a computer is a developer.
GrapheneOS has been basically flawless for me, most of the time I forget I’m even using a custom rom. Using the Aurora Store, along with a few select apps in a work profile with sandboxed Google Play services goes a long way in terms of plugging the usability gap. I know there’s supposed to be issues with banks, but at least in my anecdotal experience, I’ve used accounts from 3 different banks and haven’t had any issues.
At last, the Year of the Linux Desktop.
NVIDIA’s Debian repo for Cuda has more up to date GPU drivers, if you don’t wanna manually install from the .run file. Documentation here, its not reflected yet in the docs but there’s a Debian 12 repo.
I’m also on NVIDIA, I tried the Plasma 6 Alpha last night (on KDE neon unstable) and to my utter shock, Wayland was pretty goddamn close to flawless.
Have you ever considered going outside?
Gradience, which is a program for applying color schemes to Libadwaita apps, also supports Firefox GNOME Theme, and they have 2 Dracula variations you can choose from.
Proprietary
I’ve actually had a pretty good experience with my NVIDIA card on GNOME Wayland, but KDE was unusable.
It has the brand recognition of being “the” Linux distro, even though it doesn’t deserve that title these days (if it ever did at all).
Yep, pretty much. If your system works, no need to change it.
The biggest advice I can give is to start with something like, as has been mentioned, Linux Mint, but also, don’t buy into the idea that you eventually need to move to a more “advanced” distro. If Mint, or wherever you wind up, works for you, and you have no compelling reason to switch, then don’t. All Linux is Linux, so to speak, the only things that distinguish distros are packages/package managers, default settings/configurations, and pre-installed programs. There’s nothing preventing you from eventually becoming a power-user on a “noob-friendly” distro, if that’s something you desire in the first place.
OP when they try Debian and it’s exactly what it advertises itself as: