@omnipotens Canonical switching to GNOME is one of the best news I've heard in the last 5+ years when it comes to desktop linux. The other would be Steam for linux.
Personally I always found the development of Unity being slow and the technical decisions being ill-informed (Mir, multiple rewrites of Unity).
Now they can focus on what they do best.
Desktop Ubuntu will turn more cost-effective while delivering better quality.
P.S.: I'm using arch with KDE
@architect @BryanLunduke @danrabbit @elementary @ryanleesipes
I presume it has to do with demand and what the customers want. There are a lot of scientific applications that are programmed for CUDA and Nvidia GPUs and a portion of customers probably work on that type of applications.
I've been here for 2 weeks experimenting.
I read personal/local/federated timelines, followed people and found some interesting toots. But the time required to read stuff I'm not interested in is way more.
It's not about Mastodon, it's about this twitter-style (and facebook-style) approach of social media. I don't find useful newsfeeds that come from friends or people I follow.
I am thinking to stop using the service.
Am I doing something wrong or is this twitter-style approach not for me?
Doing research on DIY CPUs made me, once again, appreciate the Internet Archive even more
A lot of these pages were on college servers (~/username addresses) and it's amazing to me that they never bothered to see the value in preserving them
Or they were on now defunct hosting companies or the owners themselves have abandoned them for various reasons and disappeared
To have the foresight when the web was still young to try and preserve its content is amazing
Error reduces
Your expensive computer
To a simple stone.
If you opened your PayPal account before you were 18, close it now.
Thanks @Kernellinux for covering it in #AskNoahShow