Stop what? I'm just sharing news from openSUSE, I have no involvement.
banazir
openSUSE Tumbleweed has served me well for some time now. Maybe give it a look-see?
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas. Someone mentioned the book on Lemmy and I guess I got curious. It's been pretty good thus far, but it is on the long side.
They are the true blue bloods of the animal kingdom, they are already at the pinnacle.
Looks great! Where can I download this theme?
Just started reading I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy. I never watched iCarly or anything else she's been in, but I have heard of her story before. Seems like a good book if you are interested in abusive parents and unhealthy family dynamics.
The male lion then killed the cubs so the female lions would go in to heat. Nature is majestic.
Years ago I tried running Debian on my desktop computer and it became very quickly apparent it was not suited to my needs because of the out-of-date software. These days I only really consider rolling release distros for my desktop, or at least something with a fairly snappy release schedule. If I went for Debian, I'd probably run sid or testing.
Now, in situations where the bleeding edge is not necessary, Debian is fantastic. I've run it on my laptop, Raspberry Pi server and PinePhone. On the laptop, having a solid base that doesn't break if I don't use it for a while was great, since I didn't use that laptop often. I did use flatpaks for some applications that I really wanted to be more recent and it worked nicely. So yes, you can use Debian as a solid base and use Flatpaks/Appimages/other to run apps you really need the newest version of, where available of course.
After quite a bit of agonizing, I eventually landed on openSUSE Tumbleweed. I chose a rolling release distro because on my desktop I want to be up-to-date. Having used Gentoo a long time ago, I didn't want a distro that takes effort to install and set up. openSUSE is somewhat popular with an active community and decent documentation in case I run in to issues. I also considered the fact it's based in Germany, because EU has at least some decent privacy laws. I was put off by the fact its backed by SUSE, but that's a two-edged sword.
Right now I'm content with Tumbleweed, but I'm keeping an eye on OpenMandriva Lx if I feel like switching.