Hell, I’d say its high time for most to switch off of Linux.
What do you mean by this?
Hell, I’d say its high time for most to switch off of Linux.
What do you mean by this?


Yeah okay.
Didn’t know paypal were doing that…


Sadly I don’t think that’s on the cards. :(
I will object when this BS heads out my way eventually, of course. But if some law gets passed requiring the OS to be able to tell programs the age of the user, I would vastly prefer it just be something set by the sysadmin at account creation, and that the user not be able to change it themself. That last part mainly because if the user can change it themself, even braindead politicians will realise it is not doing anything and they will legislate something else. Probably something worse.


Honestly, no. I’m aware there are other options. But if the govt is mandating something, I’d rather it made sense. Demanding everyone set an env var is nonsense.


Honestly I’m not sure. I feel like I’d want that as a parent tho, personally.


In every OS I know of including linux, you need admin/su rights to create a user account. If the age is tied to the account that at least prevents tampering without admin/su access.


I suspect something the nonprivileged user can effortlessly change would be deemed insufficient. :P


The way this is written, it would just be a case of entering your age or DOB at account creation, which wouldn’t be so bad. Indeed, this would be the kind of parent-empowering solution I’d like to see, since it kind of assumes the admin of a device (who sets up user accounts) is an adult who will enter the correct info for their kids.
Of course, there’s always the concern they might try to push for adding 3rd party age attestation after the fact, with this being the thin end of the wedge. And it’d be a bit of a pain for the various linux distros to organise a compliant solution even IF it’s just adding a new parameter to useradd and the associated “age signal” API for applications to query.
Oh. Is Gimp still doing the even-numbers-stable thing…
Sounds like your issue is mostly flatpak, to me.
Only issue I have with drag and drop is any wine game I am playing assumes the file is for them, and jumps to the foreground if the cursor passes over it while dragging. If I accidentally drop it, dragging stops working in the drag source app. Sure, this wouldn’t be an issue if I were not sharing and moving files mid-game, but that is my wont.


I have had situations where I’ve explained this multiple times to people while helping them manually install the DXVK Async fork into their wine prefix and they still get it backwards.


Just make sure you put it on the right disk, if you go that route ;)


Depending on how grub was installed, you might need to boot a live environment just to tell your new mobo about it. You can skip chrooting if your live media has efibootmgr and you can figure out how to use it, but if that fails you can always chroot and install grub fresh.
Also, it might just work.
Hot take: Go with Gentoo. Dive into the deep end, manually install your system from the command line. It doesn’t get more configurable. You’ll be forced t o learn a bunch of stuff tho. But it’s not that hard.
If you take this seriously, my advice would be to not go overboard with global USE flags, and keep your CFLAGS standard.
Or go for something like Arch. Maybe CachyOS (tho I hear this has a lot of optimisations that are described as “yolo”…)
AMD graphics work better than nvidia still, but things are getting better, so if you’re with team green you might have to replace that or you might have no real problems.
Most games just work. Even stuff with anti-cheat isn’t necessarily out (e.g. Helldivers 2, War Thunder and Star Citizen are games with anti-cheat that I play). Best to check protondb if in doubt.
Arch (or Gentoo) will teach you linux. :)


GitHub no longer has a single manager (I forget if the term was “CEO”), and is being folded in under MS’s AI team.
I use it for some things. It’s good for file batch processing, for example. I could probably do those things in python but I use C# and powershell at work so I know .net better.


Sometimes I struggle with impostor syndrome. Reading this made me feel a lot more confident that I am actually really good at my job and not just fooling everyone into thinking I am.
Hard to say without having used Arch. I just really like Portage. It does some really neat things.
Ahaha :)