Keep up that projection and strawmanning. It's a great look.
ETA: and whining about criticism and equivocating that I'm censoring you in the process is just the icing on the cake. Are you sure you're not a Conservative engaging in astroturfing?
Keep up that projection and strawmanning. It's a great look.
ETA: and whining about criticism and equivocating that I'm censoring you in the process is just the icing on the cake. Are you sure you're not a Conservative engaging in astroturfing?
Cool. My first thought was how this would differ from blendOS, which is also immutable Arch. Seems like the main difference is the use of systemd-sysupdate to handle unprivileged updates.
Not sure how rollbacks are handled, but I only glanced at it.
Nope, the hype around it is because it's a Rust-based DE whose features compete with Hyprland and Gnome while hopefully improving upon both.
People are excited for what it promises to be, but it's not even close to fully cooked, though several people have found that the current features work for their day to day usage. I don't really want to have to deal with bugs or big changes, so I'll also be waiting.
I think a better option than live boot is VM. Live boot doesn't always save settings, and you may not get a full-install experience, since certain things are set up after install.
For gaming try:
And now I must follow suit
Sure. Because I'm sure a right wing authoritarian who not only reads but plagiarizes Hitler would be the better bet for Palestine and would definitely support your right to protest in the future.
But go off.
Live to fight another day.
I don't, but people should still assume he can and vote like they're the one that can tip the scale against him.
It involves a lot of self-setup and management. A lot of the benefits of Valve working on Arch will find their way to upstream and then to other distros, so that benefit is likely very small.
Neither. Use yay
, because it sounds happy.
The BT/Network thing is a really important one. Sometimes you can replace them with a more compatible one (like an Intel AX201 vs AX210), but sometimes companies will cut deals and get some weird Broadcom module that only works on Windows for one specific board version.
I will. And I'll eat a baby while I'm at it, too.