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Check out Tildes
I would if it wasn’t invite-only :/
Half the reason I was on reddit was to engage in discussions, and that’s largely lost if I’m just scrolling through an unfiltered news feed with no way to participate.
Check out Tildes
I would if it wasn’t invite-only :/
Half the reason I was on reddit was to engage in discussions, and that’s largely lost if I’m just scrolling through an unfiltered news feed with no way to participate.
I like the idea of rolling release in theory, but stability is extremely important to me because I use Linux as my daily driver.
EndeavourOS and Manjaro aren’t really going to do much to address your desire to use terminal more than Mint IMO, either; most mainstream distros like that emphasize usability first and foremost.
If you’re looking to really get under the hood, go with Arch ans follow a guide so you don’t bork anything too badly. Arch uses a different package manager than Mint/Ubuntu, so some of the commands might look different if you’re not following Arch-specific guides, but terminal is terminal is terminal in many cases. You can run Steam on Arch, and building the core functionality on your own will get you acquainted with terminal.
Although I’ve used everything from Arch to Zorin, and eventually you will have to use terminal for something. Just depends on what your longterm goals are, what usability you will need to rely on quickly, and how you think you’ll get to those goals most efficiently.
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Sounds like you should just use Mint, especially if you tried and like it. It’s customizable, GUI friendly, it’s based on Ubuntu so most guides for either will work, and you can download Steam to it and play native games (or Windows games through Proton).
I don’t know what you’re looking for, that Mint doesn’t provide. You can download different DEs or window managers, you can write your own bash scripts, and the core functionality for regular use is already there.
Pollution, climate change, unchecked capitalism, VR headsets… I’d say we’re just a few decades out from a dystopian cyberpunk era
So is this stock Yuzu without any changes? IIRC the legal issue was something about circumventing copy protection, so would this project be subject to the same issues?
Also, how do I verify that this fork isn’t malware wrapped in emulator code?
I don’t know if you’re into gaming, but Steam Next Fest has a demo for a claymation adventure game called Harold Halibut that’s pretty awesome
Also Jack and the Cuckoo Clock Heart was great and I don’t hear many other people talk about it
With horror movies, you at least have that layer of knowing it’s not real. Seeing the real horrors of mankind without that to protect you is truly disturbing.
Yeah in my experience it’s largely where you go.
Leftist spaces obv have a lot more Palestinian independence discussion.
There are lots of moderate spaces that allow open discourse that still slant toward the anti-genocide part of the equation.
Then you have places like worldnews that heavily moderate out any pro-Palestine discussion and allow for heavy astroturfing. This is kind of a big one because it’s one of the more popular places to get non-US news. So if you didn’t know how it was being moderated, you might just assume that reddit is just randomly super bloodthirsty or something.
So is this guy, like, the Devil? Every headline I see with him is like “Emperor Palpatine is buying single family homes” where I just assume it’s for some nefarious purpose that’s gonna benefit his regime and dick over a looooot of people.
A good start to fixing the poverty is if companies making obscene amounts of money from their labor start fairly paying people in these areas.
Here’s the source for anybody curious:
https://youtu.be/FwHMDjc7qJ8?si=UdaMXa7uJTqgZniu
Def worth a watch. Tony’s chocolate looks like a good alternative.
Also not to be a Deborah P. Downington but whenever I see URLs advertised where I’m not expecting them, my first instinct is “Eww, spam” and very much not “I should go to that URL because it might be a good reddit alternative”
I like the sabotage but when this was announced I 100% assumed it was an attempt to boost engagement numbers as they approach their IPO, and looks like it’s working for that.
I’m getting burnt out on jumping platforms every couple years. Loving Mastodon but the user base isn’t there yet, unfortunately.
Reddit worked great because it allowed me to engage with people and share content without the expectation of creating an online identity and stuff like you do with Twitter, Facebook, etc. It’s all “me, my stuff, my likes, my retweets.” Doesn’t matter how much karma I get on Reddit; I’m still a nobody in a sea of nobodies.
I edited all my comments to be the same message. I don’t know what the benefit would be of deleting vs editing them. Ultimately the goal is that they can’t benefit from content I’ve created, right? Is there any benefit in deleting?
That’s the script I was using :(
I used a script to edit mine, and most of them have been reverted multiple times in the last week. Some of them retain my edits, so I keep running the script.
Dang coming in clutch, my friend
I was able to register, thank you so much!