Originally, yes. It was made to help people in countries with censorship get around censorship.
Nowadays it’s maintained by the Tor Project.
Originally, yes. It was made to help people in countries with censorship get around censorship.
Nowadays it’s maintained by the Tor Project.
Well it wasn’t made by the US Navy, it doesn’t allow for clearnet traffic, it allows torrenting over the protocol. I’m sure there are other differences too.
It’s like Tor, but different.
That looks like exactly what I need. Seems to work pretty well already.
Thanks!
Well you see, they put it in page 69 of their EULA that got updated last week that they emailed directly to your spam folder. Since you didn’t opt out of that clause my sending a registered letter to their offices in Uganda, Japan, Washington, and Ukraine, it is considered that you agreed to the EULA.
Yeah. I find myself using Google Maps on a web browser to look up the coordinates, then copypasta-ing that into Organic Maps.
If you had access to wLE already, why didn’t you just back up the saves to a flash drive, or just make a complete image of the memory card?
Also on PS3, can’t you just copy saves to a flash drive in the stock OS? Even if not, jailbreaking is easy.
Yeah. There’s the ao486 core available on MiSTer.
There’s also the PCem (as well as forks 86Box and PCBox) software emulators which are excellent ways of emulating old PCs.
But emulation (regardless of whether hardware or software) is not the same experience as real hardware, especially when it comes to PCs. There is the tinkering with hardware, the process of building the PC, the satisfying click of the power button and turbo button, using floppy disks, trying to get it online, etc.
Maybe don’t make a network-enabled microwave, then. What an unnecessary IoT appliance.
Greedy corporations pay the lawmakers to bicker over bullshit instead of regulating them.
Yeah. I’ve absolutely heard of Tuxedo before
AMD has been supporting Linux officially for a very long time (both on the CPU [and chipset] and GPU side of things).
I really liked it, but I found the ending to be disappointing.
Ah. I don’t use Adobe products, so not really willing to test myself.
I know of the GitHub script to install PhotoShop, but wasn’t aware that the rest of the suite worked.
There are vendors who sell laptops that come pre-installed with Linux. Only thing is that they’re a bit more niche. Dell is probably the biggest name who sells computers with Linux as an optional OS on their website, but IIRC they brand it as “developer editions”.
Otherwise, you get vendors like System76, Tuxedo, Purism, etc. (Maybe Framework, but IDR if they even install an OS)
I still don’t think that you can walk into a store and buy any of the above.
Not that installing Linux is difficult; in fact, it’s easier than installing Windows IMO. Most distros come with easy-to-use graphical installers with easy-to-understand language, even for newbies. They also come with a live environment that lets you try out the distro before installing it. Thing is, most people aren’t even going to bother trying it.
The only real limiting factor is that most computers that you just walk into a store and buy (and are not made by Apple) come with Windows, and people just use whatever comes with their computers.
People rarely switch even default settings, let alone the entire OS.
I’m sure if computers came with Linux, there wouldn’t be that many complaints from casual users after they got used to it.
The hardest people to switch over are the Windows power users in my experience.
Pirating Adobe software is exactly what they want you to do. Their business model relies on businesses paying for their license because people already know how to use their software, in large part because people pirate it, and also they have deals with schools to teach their software.
What Adobe actually doesn’t want you to do is to learn the software of their competition, since that’s how they will lose money in the long term.
Microsoft would prefer that you pirate Windows rather than use Linux, as it further entrenches their dominance in the market.
They mainly make their money off of business licenses anyway, similar to Adobe and Autodesk.
There’s a reason massgravel’s scripts are hosted on Microsoft’s GitHub platform and hasn’t been taken down.