

hmm it’s still good to be reminded that it’s not actually until 2032, but just 2027. 2 years is more than none, but yeah, not as much as I originally thought
Computers and the internet gave you freedom. Trusted Computing would take your freedom.
Learn why: https://vimeo.com/5168045
hmm it’s still good to be reminded that it’s not actually until 2032, but just 2027. 2 years is more than none, but yeah, not as much as I originally thought
proven? how is a system proven for usage by common people that can’t even do automatic updates safely? It’s just recently getting to that point, with offline updates!
yeah you and me can use it fine. we can run apt upgrade, dist-upgrade, and fix when it does not boot anymore, but most of us are aware that our parents but also non-tech friends can’t.
Win L. the next, superior edition of windows, if someone asks.
eastern, or middle, depends on how you look at it. orbán is not representative, he’s special
Sorry American readers, we in the real world use soccer metaphors, we are manly like that, even our women
As a European reader I highly doubt all claims in that sentence. refe what?
Actually I would have thought its the Americans that do this.
especially when you are connecting from the android client… how do I type a dash instead of an ü??
that’s exactly how updates should work in every desktop distro. as an option of course.
systemd made it possible to install updates on shutdown.
packagekit enabled kde software to automatically obtain and prepare the updates.
plasma does the final touch nowadays to ask you on the reboot/shutdown dialog whether you want to install them.
Basically all the system is in place, with code from widely used parties. packagekit can even integrate with your filesystem to make a snapshot before install. It’s wonderful. yet, it seems as if only fedora supports this full setup right now? or is there anything else?