That's annoying but you can click on the community name below the title and it should take you to the community page
nfms
My first was Ubuntu in the early 2000s, I think CDs were being distributed by the IT department in one of the faculties, then SUSE but Linux didn't stick with me at the time. In 2018 I installed Manjaro which helped me make the switch to arch. I've also got Debian on a server and fedora on a laptop
You're right. My bad. I mixed up the news.
Gitlab ~~will be down for a week (or more) due to server migration~~ operates under a freemium model. GitHub is having weird Microsoft money making issues. Codeberg is the "non corporate" alternative and I see it being mentioned more and more.
There's a community of people from Europe here that very much support a stronger EU and I believe in cooperation, unity and human values. Although, I still see the EU as a milder version of the US with a capitalist economic focus and I think this will not work in the long run.
I get you. It's a question of finding the one app that works for your workflow. sometimes it takes years to find it
I mentioned Scribus but I never worked with it. I did use MS Publisher and InDesign because mixing images and text in a document editor was a pain. I used it for creating "collages".
How about something like a page editor? You can create a page with various elements, and manipulate them. Have a look at Scribus (for Linux) or other apps similar to Adobe Indesign.
I think they just picked up the old KGB handbook on how to groom people to turn on their country
Yes. I don't fear updates anymore but then i install everything, AUR, flapjacks, several DE's and break the system. I've come to realize that I like tinkering since DOS, I've accepted it and I shall be installing arch again this weekend
Maybe there isn't a market for it. Probably most crackers don't bother with Linux versions and the Linux community always tends to support FOSS software.
I think for OP it would be better off with a Framework laptop. It makes more sense in the long run.
Linux on ARM is great for SBC servers but not so good on the graphics stack. As @[email protected] pointed out Snapdragon SOCs are still lackluster. I'm sure Framework will have ARM in their lineup in the future (there's already a RISC-V mainboard) while support for these CPUs keep improving.
On the other hand, i recently bought a 6 years old lenovo, installed Fedora KDE and it all just works, more importantly for me power management is no longer an issue. It will never be on the level of the newest Apple silicon though.