I wouldn't trust anything like that to the open internet. It would be better to access the system over a VPN when you're outside the network.
The man is a monster. I don't know how many of my build jobs have been murdered by this fiend.
I had a fucking chemistry teacher who told the class that microwaved water was different (and linked to cancer)
...and of course Duck Game never got released on GoG
Fuck this greedy bullshit
Sounds like it's hard to enforce, unless after the fact a crew member came forward to say they heard a distress call and the captain ordered them to ignore it.
At the same time though (and this is me speaking from 0 experience) I'd imagine that most sailors understand the importance of "do unto others..." with respect to distress calls. Even with modern technology, the ocean can be a dangerous place.
how can an application ship with wayland?
It can't. The title is not clear about how Firefox will "Ship with [support for] Wayland [compositors] by default". Previously this native support was limited to pre-release Firefox builds.
What if the DE you’re using is on x11?
Firefox continues to support X11.
I like my bag-endian architectures
distrobox: Tool for creating one-off containers of a different Linux distro.
container: A virtual OS environment that runs on your computer, but doesn't know that it's running in your computer. It's not the same as a VM or emulator.
flatpak: A tool designed by RedHat for running sandboxed Linux programs in any environment. Flatpak can either refer to the system as a whole (eg: "You need to install flatpak on your machine to use our tools") or an individual program packaged for the flatpak system (eg: "You must download the latest flatpak of Firefox").
AUR: The Arch User Repository. A collection of installation scripts to add software to Arch Linux. These scripts are not owned or maintained by anyone officially affiliated with Arch, so you can find AUR packages for almost anything.
So, the comment becomes: Stick it in a dedicated environment designed to run Debian. Then package it so anyone can run it. Then make it easy for anyone running Arch Linux to install it.
I've been looking into getting a cheapo laptop to take outside, and Chromebooks caught my interest. However, literally everyone I spoke to about this idea recommended against it. After researching all the nuances to putting baremetal Linux on a $40 Chromebook (BIOS screws, firmware patches, etc), all so I could have 2GiB RAM and 16GiB of unreplaceable storage, I asked myself what the point even was. I might as well buy a(nother) Thinkpad T40 at that point.
Glad I didn't go with the Chromebook. Got a 2018 HP secondhand from a local college. For a little extra money, I have something with superior construction, specs, and upgrade potential.
They're not even launching in the USA because the SEC might kick their shit in. This is basically an overcomplicated scheme to harvest biometric data from impoverished foreigners. There's already been fraudulent signups from people trying to exploit the world's poor. It's dumb AF.
Firefox for Android lets you install ublock origin as an extension. I absolutely refuse to use any other mobile browser.
A better ending than last time, when Fuzzy-Select Girl tried to stop a gang of superdrug-dealers with an improperly calibrated threshold.... Ended up deleting half the neighborhood.