

Yes, but that’s no longer Ubuntu, and it takes a lot more time and effort on your part to maintain your fork. That’s not sustainable, especially if it happens to multiple products.
Yes, but that’s no longer Ubuntu, and it takes a lot more time and effort on your part to maintain your fork. That’s not sustainable, especially if it happens to multiple products.
Just because you can work around it doesn’t mean it’s not enshittification.
Windows does not require secure boot.
Why does secure boot need to stay on?
Even so, you should be able to sign the drivers and use the boot shim if you really want to go through that process.
They took all the momentum from the community and put it behind a paywall. It used to be that you could use the whole thing for free and only needed to pay for support, but now you need to pay for subscriptions. Red Hat blocks access to the package repos entirely without a subscription (though it is free in certain cases) and Ubuntu pushes the Pro subscription at every opportunity and requires it for certain security updates.
Red Hat and Ubuntu are two that leap to mind.
Which distro? Usually they have a mailing list that discusses changes like this.
I have an 8" tablet that I like because it’s a lot more portable than a full laptop, and I can rotate it, and it’s got a larger screen than my phone. Just the other day I was using it to study for a class I’m taking, and it worked wonderfully for that. And I’m sure artists love them for digital art work, especially with larger screens.
I’ve used 2-in-1 laptops, and I wasn’t a fan because they’re awkward due to the weight, and sometimes they don’t shut off all the buttons on the keyboard part. And you can’t always take off the keyboard to mitigate those issues.
Because you want a device that’s a tablet first.
Pretty much anyone outside the US will ignore the DMCA, since it’s solely American law.
However, all countries that are signatories to the Berne convention will respect copyright law, and the list of countries that aren’t is very short, and those that aren’t probably observe TRIPS. And those countries are unlikely to have the infrastructure you want.
Either add disk expansion shelves or build a SAN.
Okay but are we going to get that rust code merged or no?
This one was first. But the other one doesn’t have the “from reddit” bar.
Try it, find out.
I’m not familiar with that program. How does it determine “throttling”?
…but still fails to answer the question of “should we continue implementing kernel things in rust”.
Or Qemu if you want a similar interface.
Well this code would be maintained by developers who know rust, so it sounds like a good merge to me!
Maybe. Does that project include the graphics assets? Usually they’re just source. I glanced at the front page but didn’t see anything that looked like assets.