This attitude works on sites that provide you service. They have terms of service, and have to comply. In open source, no one owes you anything.
See a problem? Either fix it or tell someone who can, or leave.
This attitude works on sites that provide you service. They have terms of service, and have to comply. In open source, no one owes you anything.
See a problem? Either fix it or tell someone who can, or leave.
Thanks for the… explanation, but I think you’ve had enough alcohol or whatever you take.
What exactly do you mean by system collapsing and restarting? How does it look?
Yes please. This needs to be addressed.
You’ve just paraphrased your own post you made not much time ago in the same community.
???
When one drops the classic social media attitude of gathering as many views and comments as possible, the answer is simple: post it on your favourite community.
Isn’t it enough to post on one instance?
If you’re talking about the concept from the movie, no. It’s made up. Obviously.
Wow, now that’s a deal breaker. I guess I’ll have to buy the iPhone I don’t even care about now.
KDE sets a really high bar with all the packages and extensibility. Almost everything (not including the lesser known and used packages) is feature-packed and just works
. I really don’t know any other software that constantly amazes me like KDE.
I think you make a valid point about Lemmy, but “hidden from public”? Big tech literally sells your data for profit.
Other Lemmy users are not “someone who can”.