I use Plasma because I refuse to allow system.d on my computers. I use "Linux" to be in control not to be controlled. Gnome lost me at system.d. If things keep going the way they're going, I may switch to a BSD.
When has any country waited for permission to hack another? They aren't vampires. They're not waiting for an invitation from the man of the house to attempt to break in.
I'm more worried about our own country hacking us. I'd be willing to bet that the NSA has at least 2 copies of all her emails.
I completely overhauled the brakes on my '97 rodeo, front and back, for roughly $300. Of course, that was doing the work myself and I have to admit I didn't change out the discs (didn't want to take the hubs off again). I did change out the drums, calipers, brackets, pads, shoes, cylinders, fluid (pretty much everything else besides the hoses). I agree with a previous poster. My Rodeo is worth less than $1000, but spending more than it's worth for maintenance is still preferable to me than buying a new car and being stuck with a 6 year car payment of more than $300/month. My Rodeo is in better condition than most cars on used car lots that you'll find costing $4k or more. Do your own maintenance; drive a reliable car for less money and fewer surprises. I prefer true ownership.
I've worked for a French company for 16 years. On occasion, one of our co-workers will come to the US to train us in some new program they give us. One of them was trying to show me some feature I was asking him about. He was having a lot of fun finding keys on my faded keyboard. Apparently, de "D" is in a different place.
If an engineer fudges something, you can believe it's at the direction of either upper management or project managers trying to please upper management. Engineers pride themselves on putting out correct data.
In the U.S. you'll find that most of the cars that don't have a tachometer are the standards. I guess they figure you only want a standard if you can't afford the automatic. The standards are the lower end cars that they leave the tach off to save money. My Isuzu Rodeo doesn't have one. I do, however, have a pretty loud 4-cylinder engine. I still manage to shift while ignoring the idiot light.
Install Gentoo without the Gnome profile or any profile with "systemd" in it. Don't install anything that pulls systemd in.
I had to switch from Gnome to KDE. I tested Gnome3 and systemd. Hated them both. There are a lot of apps (or there were) that don't support the systemd init. Writing my own scripts is not something I care to do for systemd.
Have the city install road blocks to make traffic take a longer route. Europe has already figured that one out. (Makes it very difficult for tourists to figure out how to get somewhere).
I'm also a Gentoo user and have been thinking the same things. I did try FreeBSD on one of my computers and I liked it to an extent, but I'm also a BOINC user and nVidia refuses to offer opencl support.
So, I just switched to KDE to sidestep Gnome3/systemd. I don't like it as much as Gnome2, but systemd doesn't agree with me (tried it, too).
If nVidia ever gets a clue and supports FBSD properly, I will definitely switch at least one computer to get more proficient at it while contemplating the switch two the two main desktops.
If nVidia would wake up and support FreeBSD properly, I would probably be switching a few machines to it. I want opencl first, though.
Until then, I'm sticking with Gentoo. It doesn't matter to me if it's too difficult for others to install. Works just fine on my desktops (and anything else I want to put it on).
According to the Mayans, we've already had doomsday.
Which one?
I'm assuming that an American (USA) Football field is the one specified.
I use Plasma because I refuse to allow system.d on my computers. I use "Linux" to be in control not to be controlled. Gnome lost me at system.d. If things keep going the way they're going, I may switch to a BSD.
I'm having trouble following you. You keep speeding up and slowing down.
However, if I'm ever forced to install systemd I'm switching to a BSD.
There are a lot of GNU/Linux users that appreciate that help for keeping systemd off.
I prefer to run all my PCs with an OS that is on a rolling upgrade.
When has any country waited for permission to hack another? They aren't vampires. They're not waiting for an invitation from the man of the house to attempt to break in.
I'm more worried about our own country hacking us. I'd be willing to bet that the NSA has at least 2 copies of all her emails.
Free will would be disobeying the instructions and paying attention to only one side the entire time.
Those may be too small to see.
Note to Millennials: a degree in Bio - Engineering may give you more return on investment than a Biology degree.
There's an app for that.
I completely overhauled the brakes on my '97 rodeo, front and back, for roughly $300. Of course, that was doing the work myself and I have to admit I didn't change out the discs (didn't want to take the hubs off again). I did change out the drums, calipers, brackets, pads, shoes, cylinders, fluid (pretty much everything else besides the hoses). I agree with a previous poster. My Rodeo is worth less than $1000, but spending more than it's worth for maintenance is still preferable to me than buying a new car and being stuck with a 6 year car payment of more than $300/month. My Rodeo is in better condition than most cars on used car lots that you'll find costing $4k or more. Do your own maintenance; drive a reliable car for less money and fewer surprises. I prefer true ownership.
When is the kernel letting go?
I've worked for a French company for 16 years. On occasion, one of our co-workers will come to the US to train us in some new program they give us. One of them was trying to show me some feature I was asking him about. He was having a lot of fun finding keys on my faded keyboard. Apparently, de "D" is in a different place.
If an engineer fudges something, you can believe it's at the direction of either upper management or project managers trying to please upper management. Engineers pride themselves on putting out correct data.
Triple redundancy of the flight controls and 88 parameter FDR would easily refute that.
At least for U.S. commercial transport, there should be 2 each. Most likely one set in the nose and one set in the aft.
In the U.S. you'll find that most of the cars that don't have a tachometer are the standards. I guess they figure you only want a standard if you can't afford the automatic. The standards are the lower end cars that they leave the tach off to save money. My Isuzu Rodeo doesn't have one. I do, however, have a pretty loud 4-cylinder engine. I still manage to shift while ignoring the idiot light.
Install Gentoo without the Gnome profile or any profile with "systemd" in it. Don't install anything that pulls systemd in.
I had to switch from Gnome to KDE. I tested Gnome3 and systemd. Hated them both. There are a lot of apps (or there were) that don't support the systemd init. Writing my own scripts is not something I care to do for systemd.
Fox and Me
We both agree
I moved from Dish
To DirecTV
Have the city install road blocks to make traffic take a longer route. Europe has already figured that one out. (Makes it very difficult for tourists to figure out how to get somewhere).
I tried that. I liked it less than Gentoo or FreeBSD on their own. It's not Gentoo, it's not FreeBSD. You can only do so much with it.
I'm also a Gentoo user and have been thinking the same things. I did try FreeBSD on one of my computers and I liked it to an extent, but I'm also a BOINC user and nVidia refuses to offer opencl support.
So, I just switched to KDE to sidestep Gnome3/systemd. I don't like it as much as Gnome2, but systemd doesn't agree with me (tried it, too).
If nVidia ever gets a clue and supports FBSD properly, I will definitely switch at least one computer to get more proficient at it while contemplating the switch two the two main desktops.
If nVidia would wake up and support FreeBSD properly, I would probably be switching a few machines to it. I want opencl first, though.
Until then, I'm sticking with Gentoo. It doesn't matter to me if it's too difficult for others to install. Works just fine on my desktops (and anything else I want to put it on).