

What does it say under the Languages section for that repo?
What does it say under the Languages section for that repo?
I believe it was enabled by default on Ubuntu.
I’ve been using fractional scaling on my laptop with GNOME since I installed it about four years ago. It’s a bit heavy on battery usage but it’s worked as expected for all this time.
Text is small! The Bee Movie script is 89.2kb
I suppose we reached 4096 CPU support before full screen Flash support, just in a different way. Maybe somebody who used Linux in the Flash era can comment if it ever was working well.
Today’s the day the prophesy becomes true.
I’ve got Ubuntu on my 2015 MacBook that worked out of the box except dedicated/integrated graphics switcher and the webcam. I also installed Windows which Apple puts out official drivers for. It’s just a computer, you can plug in a USB drive and install other operating systems just the same as any other laptop.
It still runs decently, I often forget it’s a 10 year old machine. I boot Ubuntu on it for work though, and boot Windows on it for the occasional game. It’s a useful machine.
Is printing cumbersome and difficult on Linux? Yes, it can be. Is it better than Windows? Also yes.
FreshLight thinks you’re super weird.
What I stand up in AWS I don’t know how it works. How an I going to expect a hacker to figure it out?
I was in for computer science major but took lots of other electives. The only course I needed Windows for was Windows App Programming. The rest I was fine with on Linux.
Piper is a GUI wrapper for libratbag which supports a bunch of gaming mice that is great for customizing button mapping. It doesn’t do per-app basis but once you map the mouse buttons to regular keys/commands you could use another application to do the mapping per application.
But who uses that? I recall using a gnome plugin a few years ago that required an Open weather API key that you could use any location for.
Not so much broken as change of focus. Their focus now is money, and it’s hard to turn down hundreds of millions of dollars.
Ubuntu has had all three of those things. Amazon ads in the search bar was awhile back. Not sure but I assume they still hijack installing Firefox using apt and instead install it using snap. And Ubuntu Pro popups are a new thing.
That’s me as well, they did a lot to get newcomers in. It’s just easy to poke fun at them these days.
What would it look like? I’d guess Amazon ads in the search bar, proprietary package managers overriding the old open package manager, and popup ads for distribution Pro?
Wait…
Hope you’re feeling okay this morning Mr. Linksys, I love your username!