

I’m guessing that it’s going to be hard for us outside of China to have a good idea of just how much has been deleted
I’m guessing that it’s going to be hard for us outside of China to have a good idea of just how much has been deleted
Great news to hear. It would be cool if they put out more info/news/blogs about the issues they run into
Haven’t paid much attention to this side of things, but this will definitely be an important goal to reach
I use Linux mint on my old Thinkpad and for the most part it works great. I use Kubuntu on my desktop. Asides from from weird hardware issues I had when initially setting it up, works great as well (Wayland too).
I agree with others: Linux mint, fedora, Ubuntu. Honestly, whatever gives you the least number of issues
Is this going to be a truly new key or just a shortcut?
I didn’t think that the market share was actually changing much? Like it’s low but it’s still used, especially on Linux workstations with nothing else pre-installed
I daily drive both windows and Linux mint. In my experience, it’s been getting a lot better but isn’t ready for non-technical users who just want something to work. I needed to disable the nipple button on my laptop cause it drifts hard and I had to resort to the terminal for that.
I’m liking mint a lot, but I would suggest having at the least have one windows machine that you can quickly access.
Didn’t realize you could host your own, that’s good to know
Good to hear that the fight is going
My team practices rebasing instead of merging, but generally our tasks are pretty separate so conflicts are uncommon. The ones that we do have are not that big.
However I am anticipating more of them now that we’re changing build systems
Being able to download your own data would be a start
hopefully the US doesn’t keep being stupid about RISCV lmao
this is great news! we definitely need corporate backing here