Ah, that’s actually what I was thinking of in my previous comment
Ah, that’s actually what I was thinking of in my previous comment
For sure and I agree that should be enough but the average person is not good with computers and they don’t want to learn. They won’t understand the nuances of different distributions of Linux. Like try explaining the difference between a .deb, a .tar.gz, and a .rpm to a person who’s already hésitent about using Linux. Flatpak solves that by just having one download that any Linux install can use
Oh 100% but have you tried to explain how to use one to a computer novice? Like yes, the answer is usually “they should just…” but novice users will never. With flatpak, they get an experience similar to how MacOS works and a bit like how .exes work and it Just Works™️
Edit: like I’ve had trouble showing people how to use the GNOME App Store which could not be any more simple. Anyone who has been convinced to install Linux already feels way out of their element so making everything feel as natural as possible is essential (and I mean, flatpaks are awesome anyway)
I love installing things from the CLI and prefer to only do it that way but Linux needs a single click install method for applications if it’s ever going to become a mainstream OS. The average person just wants to Google a program, hit download and install. If not that then they want to use a mobile-like App Store.
Flatpak is kind of perfect at achieving both those things
Assuming he didn’t do it (he didn’t), he’s taking the fall for a saint so that’s saintly on its own imo
are you sure we can afford this house, it’s 75 whole dollars!
For real though, my friend lived in the two bedroom upstairs apartment of a former single family house for about $2000 CAD a month and when browsing old newspapers online, I saw that the house was selling for the modern equivalent of $250k CAD in 1980. This is a SFH in the downtown area of what is now a 1.5m metro area… the house would sell for >$1m now
IE was really bad for web compatibility in that it really did not properly support the specs.
Ignoring that, I’ve found any browser you don’t normally use is a lot snappier only because you don’t have any extensions installed
1906 or earlier from what I can see from historical rental listings in our local newspaper
Yeah… I wasn’t actually learning a whole lot. I live right across the river from Quebec though so I’m hoping to move over there to immerse myself in French a lot more.
I’ve always been bitter because my whole Dad’s side of the family is Francophone but never bothered to speak the language with me :(
I just gave up Duolingo at 1770 days for French which hurt to do. I was mostly just maintaining a streak at this point and with the news of them using AI to replace their employees (even if they retracted it), I decided to quit.
I’ve switched to Babbel now which has been really good so far
Fair point. I wouldn’t want to subject anyone to that
New York should just become Southern Ontario
Yuuuup this is my company too. They’re monitoring our GH Copilot /Cursor usage and they’re going to apply to our performance reviews
Right? They have a terrible rep but they’re pretty fair in my experience. The only time I’ve angered one was when I stepped too close to take a picture of her babies and she did this grass filled mouth hiss at me like a cat. Which to be fair, is fair
Yeah I kind of believe that NA would work better as a bunch of smaller countries in an agreement similar to the EU. I say that as a Canadian who’s politics aren’t as much a dumpster fire too
He’s just trying to get our CDN back to an equal level with USD :)
I grew up mostly with the PS2 and above and I thought the same thing 😅. I did think there had to be a better way though
I feel like that’s probably our nuclear option and we’re holding out for now since it’s likely Trump chickens out again
How dare the Canadian government get American companies to pay their fair share for operating here [in Canada]
As a Canadian I’d really rather US Americans were not aware of us at this point in time