Neat, wasn’t familiar with cover your tracks, super useful!
Neat, wasn’t familiar with cover your tracks, super useful!
I mean yes, but currently they’re all dependent on Windows, so its less of centralizing OSes, and more changing what its centralized on.
I’ve never had an issue with Flatseal in mint. Out of curiosity, what was your issue?
Oh I understood wikifunctions primarily as a way to operate on wikidata data, I don’t know if that’s right. And you’re right it is publically available, I guess I meant more that few few folks know about it.
Wikidata is so cool, but not really public-exposed. I imagine it’s an incredible research tool though.
Seconded. Newsflash does everything I need and looks pretty smooth.
Well, the size estimate on flathub assumes that you’re installing every dependency, which only happens if it’s the first app you’re installing with this FreeDesktop version, which is rare. I have like 15 flatpak apps installed, all of which had a claimed install of over “1 GB”, but the flatpak install directory is only like 2 or 3 GB.
There’s just not a great way to predict how big an install will actually be from flathub.
Edit: just to give you an idea, since its only downloading the deltas, most of these “1 GB download size” Flatpak apps are downloading less than 100 MB
It says possibly snap, so we can hope…
You can do that but it gets messy fast and it’s almost impossible to uninstall a DE effectively.
Thats a good point. I think its probably because most of the corporations who fund and contribute to the kernel are American, and coordinating financial and physical contributions would be complicated across borders. Just a hypothesis though.
Jeeeeez that was a lot. I get the sense that the kernel has worked as well as it has because people saw it as separate from geopolitics and so didnt discuss them…now that politics has wedged its way in I feel like it may have opened that door permanently.
Yeah, 80-100 Wh with a Lunar Lake or any modern AMD CPU. 35 Wh with meteor lake of all things is a joke.
Nope! Lithium polymer batteries are substantially different from lithium ion. Each generation of lithium batteries is a pretty unique chemistry, the only thing that stays constant is the use of lithium as the cathode. Electrolyte, anode, and interface chemistry actually progresses pretty quickly.
Also, for drastically different battery chemistries which have been commercialized, see sodium ion batteries, and to a lesser extent NaS/ZEBRA batteries.
**edit: typo
Can you imagine having a 31 Wh battery for a meteor lake part?
Also it may be light, but it isnt thin – it says it has a whole RJ-45 port! But other than that the IO is unusably limited.
Sure the threat model is different, I’m just saying it’s still a single point of failure.