You're right. My bad. I mixed up the news.
nfms
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
Great album, one of my favourites.
Where I'm from Narayan was a summer hit in the dance clubs when it came out, although my friends and I were more into Firestarter and Breathe. I venture saying that it helped bridge punk and dance in a big way.
I just installed tailscape and it works for my needs. Will read up on your docs. Thx
Bazzite comes packaged with the essentials so that anyone can use it without using terminal. Flatpak is enabled by default and this is the best approach.
You can check it out below.
https://docs.bazzite.gg/Installing_and_Managing_Software/
If you're not comfortable yet using any other terminal package manager other than apt, you can still use bazzite and learn with time. You can install most apps through Discover (KDE) or Gnome software
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