Fedora. Specifically I've been using Silverblue recently, very stable system for me.
amanneedsamaid
This is what I use (with zsh):
yt-audio() {
yt-dlp --no-playlist -f 'ba' -x --audio-format mp3 $1
}
yt-audio-playlist() {
yt-dlp -f 'ba' -x --audio-format mp3 $1
}
It takes the best quality available and downloads it to mp3.
I do exactly this for downloading music, I aliased my preferred options to 'yt-audio'
+1, displaying in a Emacs buffer solves any issues I could have. If you're already 'in' Emacs, this will be more frictionless than shell scripts around man
Emacs find-file with vertico and orderless achieve this nicely.
Yes. I suppose it would also have a sort of utility if it was mass adopted and therefore practically spendable for the average person, but I would argue that there is no inherent utility to Bitcoin.
BTC is solely a mode of investment, it offers no real benefits over fiat except decentralization. At least XMR is as or even more anonymous than cash, whereas Bitcoin has zero utility.
When they lose that money they are going to create a very big political problem for the rest of us.
And this will not happen 💀
I love Fedora Sircea, however NixOS seems like a better solution (albeit with a larger learning-curve.)
EDIT: Just looked it up, I guess it was renamed "Sway Atomic", and iirc they've also released a Budgie Atomic version with Fedora 40!
Lucky new-age shell bastards.
Thank you for the reply! Just figured that out and its awesome! Love CTRL+T for file names and ALT+C for cding.
FR, younger generations don't have to fix anything / solve any problems on their PC; any problem they're likely to run into is an abstracted error within Google Docs, within their browser.