This sounds like the sort of infrastructure project the Linux Foundation should be supporting.
Centrist, progressive, radical optimist. Geophysicist, R&D, Planetary Scientist and general nerd in Winnipeg, Canada.
troyunrau.ca (personal)
lithogen.ca (business)
This sounds like the sort of infrastructure project the Linux Foundation should be supporting.
I don’t understand how authoritarian leaning conservatives and free speech absolutists align most of the time.
This is such an interesting development. I bet a lot of dirty laundry is about to be aired.
Sure, it’s just another tarball to compile and install, right? What do you mean lots of dependencies? Oh, well, I guess there is Krita :)
That article is light on implemention details. It talks a lot about the legislation itself, and ways in which it might be implemented.
Pot – kettle
If we’re in string freeze, it’s probably within a few weeks. They’re in bug squashing and translations mode now. I’d take that bet.
Yes, but how. The details matter
Is this unmodded? I’ve never played it, and this screenshot alone intrigues me enough…
As a former slackware aficionado, I’d have to say that the general mood of the users and development team was super chill. Hell, the name slackware comes from “slack”, the goal of the Church of the SubGenius. The whole thing is a meme that’s been going steady for decades.
I had the privilege of meeting Patrick and much of the core Slackware group at the KDE 4.0 release party. They are all awesome.
I can expect that users that tolerate the Slackware style are also those that are pretty laid back to begin with. Probably they were happier people already, and using slackware just vibes with them.
Linux on all their electric cars, and they’re watching porn while driving ;)
Definitely a different kind of creative thinking involved haha
In KDE, there used to be man: as a protocol that you could use from Konqueror or anything else for that matter. Does it still exist?
I’m at work and cannot check.
It’s so ironic. Over the last few decades you could find millions of examples of the opposite question being asked.
Dragon Age Origins, first run ever. Had to apply the 4GB patch, and it still crashes occasionally on modern hardware. Off and on.
BG3. Just started Act III, still in the outskirts. The third act is so imposing that I’ve taken a break just to clear headspace, hence DAO above
EU4 (Anbennar fantasy conversion mod) – geez, this game is like crack for me. I’m now well over 4000 hours. I keep circling back. Most recent run was Dwarven Adventurer into Verkal Dromak – the sleeper dwarves with the dream magic system. Long considered a hard start, you’re now aided by an early game rebellion which can sometimes cripple your main enemies, the Hobgoblin country “The Command”. Much fun.
Oh hi Jure of KDE fame ;)
How is KMail these days? I haven’t used it in years. It always largely worked, but never really exceled at anything.
Business people post on LinkedIn. I do too. Gotta know your audience.
I know one of the Long Dark devs – chill AF – and if they are a representation of their company culture, then I would consider this less of a snipe, and more of a business model observation one would make over beers.
But, yeah, it is yet to be seen if Manor Lords is a flash in the pan, or has a long tail (like Paradox games or No Man’s Sky or others).
Somehow they passed though, right?
Well, you kind of can actually. It just replaces KWin