It was the first fully working kernel licenced under a FOSS licence. So it was the first time someone could run a 100% open source OS.
At least since maybe some really old mainframe back when stuff came with source code
It was the first fully working kernel licenced under a FOSS licence. So it was the first time someone could run a 100% open source OS.
At least since maybe some really old mainframe back when stuff came with source code
Didn't a bunch of "researchers" think the world was going to end in 2012 for some reason?
You know as someone who lives in the UK our NHS( national health service, which is basically social health care) already has a website to help you figure out if you need to see a doctor( the 111 site), and it's kinda useless. There are some things humans are simply better at, and understanding a humans physical needs is one of them.
I really think trying to replace doctors with AI is an awful idea.
I'm fine with it being used as another tool to help with the process, but that doesn't seem to be the goal of this.
I do find the super key really useful actually, for binding hotkeys for my window manager. But a key for some voice assistant is really dumb.
True, but my point is using technology to help you spread lies online to a larger scale then you could by yourself is nothing new.
Nitrokey would probably be my choice as both the hardware and software are open source( in fact you could probably build your own if you wanted to). I don't trust yubikey as the firmware that runs on them is closed source so you just don't know of it's actually secure.
Honesty for a lot of older games gog is the answer. A lot of older games just don't run well or at all on proton.
Though you could also just get an old console to play them on and never worry about updates breaking things again.
It's interesting, but with Linux and BSD already available in many different flavours do we really need it?
I mean what use case would it be better in except maybe an extreme rust enthusiast.
You've obviously never read into the research on left and right social media bot networks. Those have been around for years
It looks like a cool distro if you want/need a highly configurable package manager that makes your system easily reproducible.
But if you're just looking to learn more about Linux and learn more about how your system is set up then your average distro you might just want to go with Arch, Void, or Gentoo.
How does this affect wed development? As a lot of development techniques use cookies to create dynamic functions on a website. And will this also effect locality stored JSON data?