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West Asia - Communist - international politics - anti-imperialism - software development - Math, science, chemistry, history, sociology, and a lot more.
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Tbh I don’t know what gamescope is, but I’ll look into that and try it out to see. Thanks!


I thought about trying it out, didn’t get to it yet. I will now. Thanks!


It’s Gentoo. That could be possible, maybe something to do with the open vs non-open variant. I will look into it.


I wouldn’t call sway a custom WM, it uses wlroots which has become a standard.
Though I agree that wlroots seem to vary significantly in results with gnome and KDE based Wayland.
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Do new torrents bypass this somehow, or is it just by sheer volume and popularity ?
Better than 0 nodes, and this is not counting that they already attacked 3.
You’d be surprised how terrible politician priorities are


On a related, is there a list of good open source strategy games? I’m especially interested in grand strategy.


We really need more mobile strategy games. Seems like the right platform.


Weird question, but what does GnuCash do that you wouldn’t get easily from excel? I haven’t used any of these apps and wondering what I’m missing out on.
If you’re using something like tor, and rotate on every single search, then that would be ideal.
I assume you’re not using tor. That means all your searches can still be linked to you via the network source (ip address, etc.). Google can also use your search patterns to fingerprint you.
It may be one of the better solutions, but there are certainly privacy implications
Its best to use a protocol that doesn’t allow unencrypted messages
This is an implementation thing and not a protocol thing. What protocol doesn’t allow unencrypted messages? I am sure signal’s protocol would still allow it, it’s just that the implementation doesn’t.
And same for XMPP. Just go with the implementation that doesn’t.


Unless you pay from the exchange’s wallet


I have read that it is faster, though I have not tested it myself. Personally, my initial reason to use it was just to try something new and explore the unix world. My reason for staying is that it is a very simple init system that is pleasant to work with. It made me understand what an init system is and use it a lot more.
Systemd is good if you just want something invisible and you do not want to mess too much with an init system unless you have to. Everything integrates with it
OpenRC is nicer if you want to write your own init scripts. It is very well documented also.


For #2,
For gaming, if you use steam, you may not face more than the following:
For programming, you will love your life because everything programming is way easier on Linux.


For #1, I’ve made the realization that most distros are lightweight skins or addons on top of another distro. Most of the time, if you start with the base distro, all you have to do is install some apps, change some configurations, and suddenly you have that other distro. It is much easier than doing a reinstallation.
If you filter out all of these distros that only do a little on top of an existing, you’re left with a quite small number actually. I’d bet it’s less than 10 that are not super niche. Fedora, Arch, debian, gentoo, nixos are the big ones. There’s some niche ones, like void Linux and Alpine.
So I’d say if you try all of those, you don’t need to try any more 😁
But aren’t seedboxes more expensive? Why prefer them?