

It really depends on the kind of convenience.
Some conveniences are easier to give up, especially if giving them up will benefit others.
It really depends on the kind of convenience.
Some conveniences are easier to give up, especially if giving them up will benefit others.
Vivaldi: laughing in 2019
Cowboy Bebop
Looks like you made a typo, the U.S. is included as a growing market.
cries in Hitachi
cries in Hitachi
I’ve been “Linux-adjacent” for years, and recently switched my main gaming computer over to it. And I’ve seen exactly those frustrations so many times.
The good AND bad part about user-managed software is that the developer-users decide how things work, then things stay that way until other developer-users do things differently.
My most recent frustration? Drive automounting on boot.
On Windows or Mac, all physical drives mount when the system boots up.
On most, but all, varieties of Linux, it seems ONLY the system drive is mounted.
This gave me trouble when I tried to set a second drive as the default location for Steam.
Every time I rebooted, the Steam client forgot that I had a second hard drive. I didn’t realize why, because in system settings I told the computer to mount all drives on boot.
But. But.
By default, Bazzite seems to set secondary drives as external, rather than internal. Spork knows why.
So I had to sift through forum posts until I discovered that the internal drive was being seen as external. Then I had to figure out the combination of partition management tools and console commands to tell the system to mount the drive as an internal drive, rather than external.
It now works perfectly - after over an hour of research and a couple days of frustration.
There are two problems: 1. An extremely basic thing doesn’t work the way the majority of users expect it to, and 2. A majority of developer-users apparently think it works fine as it is and doesn’t need to be changed.
So I feel your pain. I’d rather be using Linux now for gaming and for my 3D printing related hobbies.
But for my day job, I’m on PC or Mac. I have to be, because I can’t stop working for two hours while I troubleshoot and find a solution to an obscure problem.
Several distros have those kinds of utilities built in.
Synaptics Package Manager comes preinstalled in lots of Debian derivatives.
Manjaro, Bazzite, and Endeavour have their own bespoke update managers. (Others do, as well, but those are the three non-Debians I’ve used most recently.)
Literally every good breeder in the world will tell you that “doodle” dogs are not a breed.
Good breeders don’t sell much as q “breed.”
When people put “doodle” in the name, it’s not because they’re serious about trying to breed quality dogs.
“Airedoodle” isn’t a breed.
What you have is a mutt. And mutts don’t reliably take after parents.
Usually, some type of pun based on the hardware.
So… maps?
No, because I don’t think about her at all.
I’m holding out for Premium Lite Pro.
Katamari Damacy
I mean, Manjaro wasthe first distro I truly used regularly.
But I’m no stranger to command lines, so there’s that.
It’s the exact same thing, it’s an expression of entitlement.
When you call someone out, you’re attempting to degrade their position while making yourself seem superior.
Had you simply asked him about it, people wouldn’t be universally telling you that you’re the asshole here.
Aha, I see, irony.
By “every action” you mean “no again.”