

W2k was the best.
W2k was the best.
Yeah, I really liked LXDE.
Yep. I’ve had no problems with x11. It’s always been super stable.
TBH, I’ve always wanted to do this.
I use XFCE, but I like Cinnamon too. I use Nemo and Xed instead of Thunar and…whatever.
At some point, probably after Fedora stops supporting x11, openSUSE plans to follow suit, and it will no longer be available in the repos. There’s no firm date for when this will occur, though. I read about it on the official forum.
I use XFCE. If their Wayland support isn’t ready when openSUSE Tumbleweed eliminates support for x11, I’m not sure what I’ll go to.
Good to know, even though I’m not a Gnome user. I wonder if it will work with torsocks.
In TN, a drivers license is $28 with or without Real ID. I got it by accident.
Yep, that’s the one.
I use LACT. It’s very easy to use and works well.
I’m not so sure that it is an edge case. I’m just an average person. I’m sure there are many people who have reason to receive and/or save much larger volumes of email than I do. Regardless, it’s always better to have software that works well under a wide range of circumstances.
What I’m thinking about is more that in Linux, it’s common to access URLs directly from the terminal for various purposes, instead of using a browser.
The p2p aspect is what interests me, though.
Dnscrypt-proxy lets you select dns servers based on whether they filter traffic, keep logs, use DNSSEC, etc. You can also block specific providers, such as Google or Cloudflare.
Such poetry.
So if you try to access a website using this technology via terminal, what happens? The connection fails?
I think voting on amendments and having run-offs is great. Wish we had that here.
Thank you for your service.
Winning all the swing states, including the ones that always go blue, is super unusual. It felt weird at the time, and now it seems like it was more than just weird.