

All you need is HTML, Javascript, and CSS
I make things: electronics and software and music and stories and all sorts of other things.
All you need is HTML, Javascript, and CSS
Fun fact, even tho B is False, Math.min > Math.max
is true
Big talk from AI who almost constantly generates syntax errors lol
typedef struct {
bool a: 1;
bool b: 1;
bool c: 1;
bool d: 1;
bool e: 1;
bool f: 1;
bool g: 1;
bool h: 1;
} __attribute__((__packed__)) not_if_you_have_enough_booleans_t;
Common Dynamic Typing L
I’ve not heard of “Firefox Send.” Why would I use something like this instead of scp
or Nextcloud?
I can finally learn cobol?!?!?
I don’t use Ubuntu anymore, and haven’t as my main in a long time.
My longest running distro is probably Arch, which I’ve recently switched back to after a year on Fedora and a year on NixOS
Ubuntu back in 2014. Followed by Elementary not long after
Will my ability to play games be significantly affected compared to Windows?
Really depends on the games. For the vast majority, probably not. If you play competitive multiplayer games, then it’s 50/50.
Check out protondb to see if the games you play the most work well.
Also semi-depends on hardware. Old Nvidia cards may struggle. AMD is def king in the Linux world, but it’s getting better for Nvidia
But as you are probably aware, the steam deck has been pretty successful. That wouldn’t happen if Linux gaming was all bad.
Can I mod games as freely and as easily as I do on Windows?
Hit or miss. Sometimes the mod tools have to use wine and don’t work. Sometimes they use wine and work. Sometimes they don’t use wine and work.
I have just done some modding of Monster Hunter Wilds, and it was about 50/50
When it works, it’s just as easy as Windows.
If a program has no Linux version, is it unusable, or are there workarounds?
WINE or a Virtual Machine
Can Linux run programs that rely on frameworks like .NET or other Windows-specific libraries?
.NET is cross platform as of several years ago.
How do OS updates work in Linux? Is there a “Linux Update” program like what Windows has?
It depends on the distro. Typically you just run a command in the terminal to “update all packages” or click a button in a store front.
It’s way easier than on Windows and is never forced.
Genuinely one of if not the best thing about Linux is how software management works.
How does digital security work on Linux? Is it more vulnerable due to being open source? Is there integrated antivirus software, or will I have to source that myself?
Less vulnerable due to being open source. You have all the security experts in the world, including Microsoft’s, able to view and fix any vulnerabilities as soon as they appear. Thousands of people getting their eyes on it.
There’s a reason that Linux is the back bone of the internet and nearly every server runs it.
And FYI, you don’t use antivirus on Linux.
Are GPU drivers reliable on Linux?
If it works, it will always work.
Whether it works is dependent on your GPU.
Like I said, AMD is basically perfect, Nvidia can have problems, but these days that’s less and less true (I use a GTX 3080 w/ out issue).
Mostly if you have an old, less-supported nvidia card (like pre-GTX) you may have issues.
Can Linux (in the case of a misconfiguration or serious failure) potentially damage hardware?
I’ve never heard of something like that happening.
And also, what distro might be best for me?
For beginners the correct option is almost always Linux Mint
I would, but I can’t get through their captcha (even w/ adblockers, tracking, etc all disabled)
People who work at Apple: Completely Blank
“I will revise that part to reflect the correct approach.”
Proceeds to spit out the exact same output
Don’t leave out “nano duckduckgo” and “code brave”
And any project worth their salt will reject it for two reasons:
The modern version of Gtk and its APIs started with the switch to Cairo back in Gtk 2.8 circa 2005. While Gtk 3 and 4 have undoubtedly improved upon Gtk 2, they fundamentally still work in a similar paradigm and still have all the crust of a 20 year old library. Like most old software projects, it has some level of backwards compatibility and deprecates and adds slowly. Gtk is, like, the definition of legacy, and Qt is in a similar boat. They’re OLD old.
I personally turn back on persistent sessions and history
I did as well.
My point is just that it makes sense to be the default in that browser given its inclination towards privacy.
just philosophically it should be kinda evident that over-concentration on one corporate controlled rendering engine isn’t a good thing
Totally with you on that point.
However, I feel now that Gecko has already lost. I was a long-time FF and later Librewolf user, but Websites don’t care to support FF as much, so I’d have important sites break. I’d have to have a Chromium-based backup anyway.
So I’ve now given up on that from. I have no real choice but to use Blink in some capacity.
Right. So perhaps Librewolf isn’t a good choice for Zorin OS
Having bunch of plugins built-in is not any better than having a bunch of plugins