One for each deadly sin, duh.
pointless
One for each deadly sin, duh.
The chatbots, presumably.
This is the answer. Current stable Debian already has the latest release of Xfce (4.18); and for recent gui apps there’s flatpak.
For packages like syncthing you can enable official apt repos to get the latest versions.
Other packages for which the latest versions are desirable though the flatpak versions get a bit too finicky (like vim & emacs), you can compile from source. It’s not hard, even for a newbie.
What’s up with the Fedora font on the ‘explicit sync’ though? Hmmm…
what message? This was a real product released by Sony.
Right; a stationary Steam Machine (upgradable, etc.) would be a desktop PC running SteamOS, which should probably remain outside the purview of Valve’s hardware division.
But they’re already back! The Steam Deck is the resurrected Steam Machine.
It was going perfectly smooth (Plasma 6 wayland, amdgpu drivers); though the past week or so I started getting random shell crashes. (It’s very impressive that Qt apps all come back unscathed – but I don’t use too many Qt apps.)
Even before that (by about 2 years, I believe), when ZFS on Linux became OpenZFS as the shared upstream, that constituted the proverbial ‘writing on the wall’.
The bot says it ‘saved 0%’; so at least it’s honest.
macOS switched from AFS to samba for file sharing & time machine backups a while ago; it’s been a while since I had first-hand experience setting up a Mac, but based on that fact I’m pretty sure samba is more straightforward to use. … it annoyingly mangles unix file ownership, & permissions though, as mentioned above in https://lemmy.ml/comment/10204431
Michael W. Lucas’s “Networking for System Administrators” is a great resource: https://mwl.io/nonfiction/networking#n4sa
doas is likewise configurable; though the mechanism that keeps track of the timeout is different on OpenBSD (where doas originated) & Linux ---- and there used to be some reservations about the latter implementation.
It’s already on the testing build: https://packages.fedoraproject.org/pkgs/gnome-shell/gnome-shell/fedora-40-updates-testing.html
pathetic overall
I am afraid that the need to understand how tools work will never go out of fashion. Not everyone’s horizons are limited to one-time quick & dirty solutions.
chatgpt makes it … go, amirite?
Yeah; & by the way, warp is funding fzf, as there’s a big thank you banner on fzf & fzf-vim’s github pages nowadays. I’m glad fzf is getting support, of course; though it feels odd somehow.
Also animate it at ~10fps, making it visibly sad when it can’t retrieve the files you ask for.
To me this is complete nonsense — but they (warp) seem to be funding fzf … which is good on their part, I guess.
I wonder what their ‘prompt’ was, especially with the demonic blowfish thingy. “Theo De Raadt as a FreeBSD convert assaulting Linux” – maybe?