I also had that experience with emacs, which has a built in help system. I couldn’t find a topic on ‘exit’ or ‘quit’ and refused to just search online.
Took me half an hour.
I also had that experience with emacs, which has a built in help system. I couldn’t find a topic on ‘exit’ or ‘quit’ and refused to just search online.
Took me half an hour.
Sure they are, but system apps are still installed in the immutable space initially, which is the important thing, that updates to it can’t go there.
I don’t know how desktop immutable systems deal with that.
Another prominent example is Android. Sure system apps can be upgraded individually – by storing the new version in a restricted part of the ‘user’ partition – but otherwise the system files are strictly read only until a new ‘image’ is ‘flashed’ to it by the update system or a power user with debugging tools. In the past, a common use of root capabilities was to remount the system partition as read/write and then change files on it directly. It’s more complex now.
That’s also why system apps can be rolled back to the stock version, and can sometimes be disabled, but can’t be directly uninstalled like user apps. Only the updated version on the user partition (if there is one) can be removed.
Wayland is still too broken for him?
As far as switching out Explorer goes, it’s not actually the window manager, that’s Aero since Vista - but it is the shell on desktop editions of Windows… But not all editions. Some server editions (“core”) and some specialized other ones have the shell set to literally just a cmd window. There’s no taskbar, no Start, no desktop icons, etc. There’s a cmd window that if closed triggers a reboot. Of course other things can be started from it.
I’m not sure if there’s a setting that could be changed to make a desktop edition behave like that or vice versa.
GNU’nt
Interesting. If they do that in the US some day, I would absolutely much rather buy that device than unroot my phone.
I guess I don’t know what you mean by “authenticating transactions”.
Web browsers.
Edit: Nevermind, I don’t know what this even is.
Both wobbly and colorful
IDs don’t count. Would fail too many for a hard to fix thing.
The people also have the AI look
Yes it is, and because of who owns it, I would even prefer that to an unsandboxed closed source native binary.
Klaatu Barada N… Necktie… Nectar… Nickel… Noodle…
No answer here, but I just want to point out that according to that graph, you can gain an extremely high skill level in Bacula in a very short time!
It would seem to be the easiest to learn based on this one cartoon.
(Related: the phrase “steep learning curve” means the opposite of the way it’s usually used)
I really didn’t want to let it win.