It’s a legit fediverse software for sharing music. I don’t know anything about specific instances though.
It’s a legit fediverse software for sharing music. I don’t know anything about specific instances though.
Nice bonus :D
Looks like it’s the same dock I was imagining the whole time. A couple years ago I randomly got a chance to play around with an old ipad (2?) and a midi keyboard. Didn’t encounter this bug.
I think that remark was only meant for directx, and the ai lumps it with godot.
It does, but the ui isn’t really designed around that. I draw in krita and edit images in gimp. Doing it the other way would suck for both uses.
edits
Krita is more of a painting program.
I’d like to interject for a moment…
Had a similar experience with a '13 air. Everything works, except wifi. F’n Broadcom. Don’t remember how I got a working driver, but the next time it breaks I’ll just try to order some compatible wireless card instead.
Not much that I can think of. I used it until a few years ago, and the experience was pretty good.
It seems that Canonical likes to spend a lot of resources on building projects on their own and put them into Ubuntu, only to discontinue them for another solution after some amount of years.
They’re currently pushing hard for their snap packages. It isn’t a bad concept per se but their Snap Store server is closed source, with no alternatives repositories so far. There are also other options, like Flatpak, which is more widespread, and fully open.
Tried it, cannot recommend.
My advice is to just look at the screenshots of a few mainstream ones and pick one that looks the most usable.
A few:
These AI generated images for articles bother me a lot.
I wonder how long it takes for them to fully retire lightning.
Replaceable sure, but probably not worth it. My new one is a bit nicer, so for that I might do it when the time comes. I still keep the old one around for random occasions I need a keyboard.
My previous mechanical keyboard lasted about a decade. Or it still works, but I bought a new one because the keycaps had worn so much.
I don’t think that matters at this point. Flatpak is widespread and Canonical can’t possibly expect the linux crowd to choose the proprietary alternative. I could see snap being the one, had they just handled it differently.
2 years later: It’s now up to the lawyers to figure out if it’s the rocket that doesn’t meet agreed requirements or if it’s on the customer for not giving proper requirements.