The beauty of Linux at home, you get to choose what works best for you.
The beauty of Linux at home, you get to choose what works best for you.
Also, you can configure sudo to prompt every time if you really want.
I was on a system that was configured that way for “security”, so I would just ‘sudo bash’ which is obviously much safer /s.
I totally expect one day a XFCE (Wayland) option will show up, I will click it, forget I did, and use it forever more.
XOrg is my daily driver for these reasons:
That being said, I have no fundamental opposition to Wayland, and will probably use it someday.
Similarly, I like to toy around with tiling window managers, but then someone less technical needs to use the computer, so back to XFCE we go.
Probably because of what happened to CentOS. Who owns the Fedora trademark? How independent is Fedora really?
I am not saying anyone should avoid Fedora, I can just understand why someone would.
To be fair, some of these look very different in non-C-like languages (e.g. Lisp/Haskell).
For real, this is why I enable format on save.
+1 Void Linux revived my old ThinkPad very well.
Use the image with XFCE and glibc for the easiest time.
I use syncthings.