That is a horrific outcome.
Free-licence the Argus IP now.
That is a horrific outcome.
Free-licence the Argus IP now.
Reject pixel-graphics, install aalib
;^)
I remember when Ubuntu was released, and I still have one of the first or second release Ubuntu shipit CDs.
Ubuntu was good at marketing and they were good at making things ‘just work’.
It was often the recommended choice of starter-distro due to hardware compatibility.
I’ve installed and admin’ed Ubuntu on 20 PCs in a small office setting, and it provides a decent user experience.
I would not personally use Ubuntu.
My daily driver now is Trisquel GNU/Linux, which is Ubuntu with all non-free packages(and binary blobs) removed.
If you are at the stage where you know how to source hardware that works with FLOSS-drivers, try out a fully-free FSF approved distro.
https://www.gnu.org/distros/free-distros.en.html
Clean, with zero corporate fluff.
Muzei - a free wallpaper changer on f-droid
It has many sources for images, like NASA APOD, masterpieces, NatGeo, Ghibli and others.
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Revolution OS(2001) was maybe the earliest documentary about Free Software.
This was great to view at LinuxConf2001, seeing many of the names you’d only read about previously.
Warning: It interviews various people discussed in this thread, but also contains plenty of Stallman being right.
One of the best quotes about Free Software, was how it is essentially using the same principles as Judo, use the opponents momentum against them.
The way Free Software uses full, restrictive copyright to create a permissive, free sharing-based copyright is an excellent example of the technique within many Judo throws.
I can’t remember where this quote was from, and a quick search found nothing. Maybe someone else can pinpoint it.
Trisquel GNU/Linux, is Ubuntu with all the non-free packages removed. Don’t see any of that stuff.
Teaching the alternatives to closed-source software: GCompris
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…the paint is six times thicker than the usual coating on the car body surface… looking to commercialize the paint on ambulances and other specialized vehicles as the first step.
This is the best part of the article.
After driving ambulance during Australian summers, in the Great Victorian Desert, this would assist so much with operating temperatures. A literal life-saver, if the AC ever broke, also.
That paint’s name…?
A mirror, the car is now mirrorball.
Everyone wants to be Mr Black.
This is the t-shirt one I remember.
From
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20230726/p2a/00m/0sc/014000c
Thanks for that info.
Can you outline generally which frequencies are for which countries? I could not find those details.
Or which frequencies are better for which use cases? (urban housing vs bush hiking. )
Looking for Australian specific details too.
Very interesting tech.
“Two feet on the gas” - Official Crowdstrike motto.
not /s
Thanks, I was checking both before going with ddwrt.
Looks like OpenWRT has more options and less hand-holding. Would that be right?
Thanks for the props :]
I usually look at the session graph data on Gadgetbridge, or export a bike GPS track to OSMand to look more in depth at position, height, speed etc.
TempleOS is a fever-dream.
The entire OS is released into the Public Domain, so it’s technically more free than Linux, which is quite a feat.
Kind of like the Watts Towers, it’s a one-man curiosity or folly.