[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 days ago

Honestly, I'd be cool with that

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 6 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Ooh, that actually doesn't sound bad... Slightly tart sweet with the salty tang of the sauce, maybe with a kick of spice from jalapenos... I'll have to give that a try sometime

ETA: I missed that it said "pasta" rather than "pizza", but my comment stands

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 1 points 3 days ago

That, right there, is something that's said right before someone learns the definition of "defenestration" the hard way

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 13 points 3 days ago

That means he fired himself too, right?

...... Right?

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 2 points 5 days ago

Amazing episode

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 85 points 1 week ago

Jesse, on his part, suggests Elon Musk’s controversial nature is to blame for the people laughing at him.

While I'm sure that's part of it, mostly it's just the fact that you blew 6 figures on a poorly assembled low res rust triangle

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 12 points 1 month ago

Or I could switch to Linux...

OH WAIT, I already did that, darn. Such a shame I can't ditch Windows twice.

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 17 points 1 month ago

Ubuntu really isn't the only candidate though... Mint may not have quite as much name recognition, but I don't think it's that far off, and it has pretty much all of the benefits of Ubuntu without the issues.

Mint just works.

And I absolutely think it's justified to call Canonical out for things like quietly redirecting apt to install snaps instead or throwing up scare messages to make people think they're insecure if they don't pay for a subscription or adding unnecessary packages to the minimal install image that're only useful for paid subscribers but call home regardless

Canonical has been toxic and getting worse, not calling them out is basically telling them it's okay for them to treat the community the way they have.

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 24 points 1 month ago

Fedora with Flatpaks is open and up front about whether you're getting a Flatpak or a system installed package, and lets you choose if both are available. And installing through dnf/yum isn't going to do anything at all with Flatpak.

And what about Debian with debs? That's literally what apt was designed to work with. If it gave you Flatpaks, or the flatpak command installed debs, that would be more like what Ubuntu is doing.

The fact that Canonical shoehorned snaps into apt is the problem. I've heard bad things about snap, but I wouldn't know because I've never used it, and I never will because of this.

When I tell my computer to do one thing and it does something completely different without my consent, that is a problem, and is why I left Windows. I don't need that in Linux too, and Canonical has proven they can't be trusted not to do that.

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 14 points 1 month ago

And they DO NOT CARE if you don't actually use or install the extensions (unless something has changed, the guest add-ons are part of the free open source part, it's the extensions for things like USB 2 support that aren't free for commercial)

You can use it freely, by license, but they'll come after you anyway

I'm still pissed that they bought Sun, so many great products now controlled by those assholes... Virtual box, MySQL, Solaris, Java...

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 36 points 1 month ago

You'd think with all those penguins...

[-] laurelraven@lemmy.zip 32 points 2 months ago

If I'm putting BSD or MIT license on something, I'm explicitly saying you can use it however you want, you can change it however you want, you don't have to share back, I just ask for credit for my part in it

It's not taking so much as being given freely

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laurelraven

joined 3 months ago