The grocery stores I donate at specify the local food bank. If I cross reference this with a little searching around I can see where my money is going.
The problem is I don't believe it. That's called fraud and so far as I know, in Canada, that isn't something you can just do. They have to give to the food bank.
Are you saying none of the money a grocery store collects ultimately goes toward feeding the hungry? I want to stress here that anything more than nothing is food in hungry mouths here.
We need to recognize that this was a preventable crime without OpenAI's intervention. Let's stop making excuses to open up a Minority Report police state
Gnome is my go to "get a solid desktop" quick choice. Whenever whatever experimental DE/WM I'm messing with can't paint a window because it didn't expect something, Gnome is always there.
Sorta. Whomever does payment on your behalf has to be willing to extend credit for an immediate transaction while the very slow process of exchanging money happens at a delay. This is especially so if the transactions are international. I truly wonder how the phone with just an ordinary bank account does this. Is it Google/Apple who extend credit? If so, is that better?
Fedora was the first to get my NVidia Card and proprietary wifi card working out of the box without intervening. It also updates my Dell firmware out of the box. Debian, last time I checked, does not. I haven't tried since before Bullseye.
Similar to Debian but tangentally, I run Guix which falls under the same GNU umbrella of what "free software" is and I have to break that with non-free channels to get the same laptop running.
Debian takes work, especially if you have tricky, proprietary hardware that requires firmware support. It comes with that magical "free software only" mentality that makes it harder to adopt and hence why Ubuntu and Mint exist. It's a great minimalist distro
I sometimes forget that I'm not the only kind of user who may run a Linux box. I'm not immune to compromise, but I'm not an "average" user like say... Peggy from accounting.
You may run Fedora in WSL2. This is what I do. My work is largely command line based. Use Wezterm. If you must, launch GUI apps from there. I'm running graphical Emacs daily just fine this way. My coworkers don't have half the gas for our kubernetes pods that I do and that's by in large the fact that I refuse to lose my Linux chops
Put off college