Wayland has been in the works for more than a decade. Granted, there's some people having issues with it, with propietary hardware (nVidia) and not-so-common setups like two monitors, but it happens that they are the most noisy. For the rest of us it's been great, stable, and feels snappier than X.
If you want to talk about shoehorning stuff into Debian, talk about systemd.
Never got into the tiling wm craze, but since I found out about Gnome's PaperWM thought it was much better than tiled and traditional wms and wanted something like that for KDE. Even was thinking about doing it by myself until one day learned someone else did it and much better than I would
I mean, school days and jobs are social constructs so they can be changed. It's just that our current society has been built or transformed around individualism so people have the belief those things can't be changed
As much as I love potatoes and that they came from this little corner in the world, unlike bananas they have to be cleaned up. I know this because my father grew potatoes all of his life. Alas bananas won in that aspect.
Slim, stripped of unneeded documentation and files (including National Language Support; CRUX only supports the native language the programs were written in, which is english in most cases)
I'm positive about cutting unnecessary stuff, but imho that's a bit too much (I mean for us non native english speakers, or at least those not learning english)
Glad to help, but even more glad that this keeps going (fortunately not a copyright strike thing whatsoever!) and you're doing the good deed. Thank you
Me too, but now that you guys just mentioned it went to it and found out that its mantainer, @MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz, seems pretty much active. I'd like to think something about the bot happened, but I can't help but fear something like the fate of r/calvinandhobbes repeated here somehow
it has more features and is less prone to breakage
In previous versions (like a year/a year and a half ago) it was kind of funky and when I set the keyboard to recognize the brightness up/brightness down, it would mess with the mouse. But somehow they managed to fix that and it's working flawless ever since.
I can remember feeling like that when my parents were teaching me how to ride a bicycle, but it was only somewhat recently when I heard somewhere it's better, easier, safer and faster to teach them kids how to ride a bicycle without pedals, so they can coast with their feet and gain that sense of balance
Almost nobody here gives a flying fuck about education quality. If we were to talk about education injustices we could argue about how the USA stole the name of the continent for theirs and how most of the world went along with that, and you people don't seem to like that talk...
But in all seriousness I guess we as Latin America/South America don't have that sense of unity as Africa does. We are absurdly diverse and I think it has taken a toll in our sense of identity
Uhm, what?
Wayland has been in the works for more than a decade. Granted, there's some people having issues with it, with propietary hardware (nVidia) and not-so-common setups like two monitors, but it happens that they are the most noisy. For the rest of us it's been great, stable, and feels snappier than X.
If you want to talk about shoehorning stuff into Debian, talk about systemd.