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RollTime

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  1. Agree
    RollTime reacted to Hunter259 in I Ripped Up My Sponsor’s Check - Israel Design Center Tour 2   
    Alright I've put up with it for years but these last few titles + thumbnails are just absurd. This one might be the worst of three. Subbed since the garage. Sad since this is a good video
  2. Agree
    RollTime got a reaction from finest feck fips in This is FINALLY Getting Easier... Linux Challenge Part 3   
    I would avoid judging operating systems solely on the basis of how long it takes them to zip things.
     
    In any case, this is a problem with Dolphin. Dolphin's built-in compression is single-threaded. Doing it through Ark is much faster. I think KDE devs should work on better integrating Ark and Dolphin, as it would solve several problems that have come up in Linus' workflow.
  3. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from Paul Thexton in This is FINALLY Getting Easier... Linux Challenge Part 3   
    please god put some linebreaks in here.
     
    Also, I don’t know what you’re smoking, but just because you’ve been using a shitty workflow for years doesn’t mean it’s good. What happens if you take a screenshot and then copy some text before you can paste it? Image is gone.
     
    You mentioned how using a “tool” is bad as opposed to… I guess built in functionality? But paint is a tool, and crappy one at that. Let me introduce the alpha and the omega of screenshot apps: Flameshot.
     
    https://flameshot.org
     
    You can assign shortcuts for capture window, capture screen, and capture region. From there a menu shows up *around the screenshot* that lets you edit the image, add text or censor, and then choose what to do with it. You can save it, copy to clipboard, or even upload to Imgur in one click. No mess, no fuss. Integrated and slick GUI, yet very powerful.
     
    Windows’ screenshot management was so bad not even Windows uses it anymore. You deserve better.
  4. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from finest feck fips in This is FINALLY Getting Easier... Linux Challenge Part 3   
    please god put some linebreaks in here.
     
    Also, I don’t know what you’re smoking, but just because you’ve been using a shitty workflow for years doesn’t mean it’s good. What happens if you take a screenshot and then copy some text before you can paste it? Image is gone.
     
    You mentioned how using a “tool” is bad as opposed to… I guess built in functionality? But paint is a tool, and crappy one at that. Let me introduce the alpha and the omega of screenshot apps: Flameshot.
     
    https://flameshot.org
     
    You can assign shortcuts for capture window, capture screen, and capture region. From there a menu shows up *around the screenshot* that lets you edit the image, add text or censor, and then choose what to do with it. You can save it, copy to clipboard, or even upload to Imgur in one click. No mess, no fuss. Integrated and slick GUI, yet very powerful.
     
    Windows’ screenshot management was so bad not even Windows uses it anymore. You deserve better.
  5. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from syborg64 in This is FINALLY Getting Easier... Linux Challenge Part 3   
    please god put some linebreaks in here.
     
    Also, I don’t know what you’re smoking, but just because you’ve been using a shitty workflow for years doesn’t mean it’s good. What happens if you take a screenshot and then copy some text before you can paste it? Image is gone.
     
    You mentioned how using a “tool” is bad as opposed to… I guess built in functionality? But paint is a tool, and crappy one at that. Let me introduce the alpha and the omega of screenshot apps: Flameshot.
     
    https://flameshot.org
     
    You can assign shortcuts for capture window, capture screen, and capture region. From there a menu shows up *around the screenshot* that lets you edit the image, add text or censor, and then choose what to do with it. You can save it, copy to clipboard, or even upload to Imgur in one click. No mess, no fuss. Integrated and slick GUI, yet very powerful.
     
    Windows’ screenshot management was so bad not even Windows uses it anymore. You deserve better.
  6. Like
    RollTime reacted to hyperactve in This is FINALLY Getting Easier... Linux Challenge Part 3   
    This is my summary of the series so far.
     

     
    I use Mint in my Laptop, Ubuntu in my Deep Learning machine and Windows 10 in my Home Gaming Machine. I probably use the Windows 10 machine the least, once a week may be.
     
    Edit: Just saw Luke and Linus getting some unnecessary hate. That's unwarranted. All of the stuff they faced and did are normal. Even in windows people use vastly different softwares to do the same stuff. Linus few months ago covered a story about how a snipping tool that uplaoded pictures in some website is a security risk. It wouldn't happen if people used default tools available in windows.
     
    Edit2: Just FYI, unless you are using sftp protocol to browse server filesystem, linux is auto refresh. For sftp protocols you get a reload button in the explorer (gui) which works as refresh button.
  7. Agree
    RollTime reacted to finest feck fips in This is NOT going Well… Linux Gaming Challenge Pt.2   
    Linus' discussion of scripts at 724s is very revealing, in two ways:
    He treats scripts as somehow more risky and dangerous than executables, which Windows users like Linus download and run from random websites all the time, and are much harder to inspect than scripts The idea that a user (of any system) should have some basic idea of what they're doing is so alien to Linus that when Luke mentions that you're supposed to actually inspect the scripts that you run, Linus breaks out laughing and cannot stop. He also mentions how ‘long’ the script is, (talking about how much scrolling he had to do) That ‘long’ script is also less than 200 lines, including whitespace. The following is a complete list of all of the commands it contains, aside from shell builtins like cd and exit:
     
    apt-get clear cp chown dpkg grep pacman pacmd pulseaudio sed sh sudo tee That's the complete list of commands Linus would need to understand to audit that script. Most of those are so common and quotidian that anyone who will ever touch a Unix-like command line more than once in their entire life should make a point to know them. (And anyone who uses a Unix-like command line for a year or two will learn them by accident.)

    The only two that are specific to the application are pacmd and pulseaudio. Those are also, along with apt-get, dpkg, and pacman, the only commands in the script that are specific to Linux; the rest are present in some form on macOS and *BSD. Every one of those commands has a manual that can be consulted quickly and efficiently to make sure that a given usage of the command is not malicious.

    In no way does it take a ‘security professional’ to inspect that script to determine whether or not it is malicious. Barring some disability, language barrier, or active hostility toward learning, any newbie could develop the skills required to sanity check that script in a week or two.

    It's clear that for Linus, asking users to exercise any judgment or diligence at all when it comes to scripts is unthinkable. That point of view embodies many of the attitudes Linus ascribes at times to the Linux community: it's extreme, condescending, and elitist. In a word, it's pitiful.

    (There's a big difference between saying ‘I don't want to do that right now’ or ‘I don't have time to learn this’ or ‘that's too hard for me’ and the attitude Linus reveals in that clip.)
  8. Like
    RollTime reacted to Dutch_Master in This is NOT going Well… Linux Gaming Challenge Pt.2   
    Oh, Linux has arrived. Big time. In the server world: it's quite dominant there. Even M$ is running their Azure cloud on Linux. Because their own OS can't handle it.
     
    Linux has arrived even more: in the IoT world. It's dominance there borders on a monopoly, really. because any other OS, safe for a BSD (which is also Open Source), simply can't handle it: too small, too little resources, too cheap to justify a 10x price hike because of a software licence...
     
    Thing is, only on the gamer desktop is Linux not dominant. Yet. Everything else uses Linux, from expensive supercomputing to your toaster, washing machine and fridge and of course the router you connect your Win-OS gamer PC to the internet with.
  9. Agree
    RollTime reacted to Ashley MLP Fangirl in This is NOT going Well… Linux Gaming Challenge Pt.2   
    the thing is though it's not a beta product. Linux can be very powerful if you know how to use it, and suits some people's needs MUCH better than Windows. for me, i got into it because i wanted to try it (when i was like 12, i heard about it and was like oh i'm trying it) and immediately fell in love with it. it doesn't do anything behind your back and you are in full control at all times, which i love. it doesn't install candy crush on it's own, doesn't update on it's own when i don't want it to, i have total control. 
     
    the thing is though, you have to know how to use it in order to fully take advantage of it. Windows is the same, but people just overlook the fact that if you use Windows all your life things that are idiotic feel normal. 
     
    like, if i have to set up a new machine, i pop in a usb with a custom manjaro iso that i made on it, that automatically runs a script after install that applies all my settings and installs all my apps for me. i can't do that on Windows. i'm sure there is a way, but i don't know it. 
     
    to me, a fulltime Linux/Mac user, Windows is the OS that feels weird. if i'm using Windows and encounter a problem, i have to google it. on Linux, i probably know the command from memory. 
     
    see my point? if you are used to something it becomes your normal. if i have to completely delete the nvidia driver for example because it messed up, on linux i run 1 command i have typed dozens of times now and know from memory. on Windows, i have to look up a guide. 
  10. Like
    RollTime reacted to igormp in "Why Do Command Lines Still Exist?" is getting it wrong   
    I got nerd snipped and another solution is to simply do a permutation of all of the values through a cartesian product (recursively), which can be done as a single line in python:
    >>> [print(i) for i in itertools.product(['T', 'F'], repeat=3)] ('T', 'T', 'T') ('T', 'T', 'F') ('T', 'F', 'T') ('T', 'F', 'F') ('F', 'T', 'T') ('F', 'T', 'F') ('F', 'F', 'T') ('F', 'F', 'F')  
    If you still want to go with the "counting numbers" way, that's also pretty easy:
    >>> [print(f"{i:03b}".replace('0', 'F').replace('1', 'T')) for i in range(2**3)] FFF FFT FTF FTT TFF TFT TTF TTT  
    But I don't get what this has to do with the message you replied to, since that's a basic problem that has nothing to do with expressiveness or how it's an example of "telling the computer exactly how you want it done."
  11. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from trag1c in "Why Do Command Lines Still Exist?" is getting it wrong   
    I ran into a good example of this with a recent Discrete Math problem:
    "Given a positive integer n, produce a width-n array of truth-values whose rows would be all the possible truth-value assignments for n propositional variables."
     
    This is a massive pile of jargon, so here's an example for n=3:
    F F F
    F F T
    F T F
    F T T
    T F F
    T F T
    T T F
    T T T
     
    If you have n variables that can be true or false, list all the possible combinations of these variables.
     
    There's a lot of ways to think about this problem, but I'll skip to the solution. Just count up to 2^n - 1 in binary, starting at 0. Take the value of each bit as the truth value. Like so:
    000 F F F
    001 F F T
    010 F T F
    011 F T T
    100 T F F
    101 T F T
    110 T T F
    111 T T T
     
    Fairly simple. In C, this isn't too complex to do:
    bitStatus = (num >> n) & 1; There would be some work to do with finding n in a 32 bit integer, but not too hard, and pretty close to the original idea.
    In Python, though? There is, as far as I can tell, no easy way to do this with bitwise arithmetic. The above syntax works, but ints have variable length, and your behavior might not be consistent. The better (or at least easier) way to do it is this:
    import itertools def truth_table(n): for i in itertools.product(['F','T'],repeat=n): print(i) This involves bringing in a large module for a small problem. The tradeoff of python's high-level int datatype is that you lose easy lower-level access to your data. The same concepts apply with GUI vs CLI.
    The GUI is an enormously powerful tool, but it also makes abstractions that can make simple tasks harder. For example, let's say I want to change my screen refresh rate. In GUI, I need to open my settings, navigate to the proper page, find the correct item, change it, and click apply.
    Now let's change the X refresh rate in bash:
    xrandr -r 144 This takes seconds to type and you can even alias it if you want to. This is a lot of what I actually use the CLI for on a regular basis- functions I need quick access to but not so quick they're worthy of a keyboard shortcut. The expressiveness and flexibility of the text interface is perfect for this.
    The CLI these days is best for two things, IMO: the things I describe above and really fiddly, complex tasks. Working with lots of files with data-driven names, for example, is usually quicker in CLI.
     
    Computers are tools, and my goal is always to use them as efficiently as possible. Sometimes the GUI is faster, and sometimes the CLI is faster. There's no reason we can't have both, and personally you can pry my terminal out of my cold dead penguin flippers :).
  12. Agree
    RollTime reacted to Lurick in "Why Do Command Lines Still Exist?" is getting it wrong   
    Tell that to network engineers, programmers, etc. who use it day and night because that's where the powerful functions are. But you keep not understanding the point 🙂
  13. Agree
    RollTime got a reaction from WolframaticAlpha in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    This series, imo, has a fundamental problem that prevents it from broadcasting the right message:
     
    Linus is trying to review Linux.
     
    This series is supposed to be about a newbie's experiences. Linus runs into a lot of problems, some of which are his fault and some of which are not. However, he's not presenting any of these issues as they are. He's complaining about them, as would a reviewer highlighting issues with a product. This is understandable, given LTT's focus as a channel and Linus' background. The thing is that in order to review something, you need to know a lot about it. Linus does not know a lot about Linux, by his own admission. So why is he trying to present his experiences as though they're features of a product? Why is he trying to style himself as an authority?
     
    I think this series would be so much better if Anthony was presenting. As someone who really does know a lot about Linux, he should be analyzing what happens to Linus and Luke and presenting it through the lens of someone who can speak with authority on the subject. That would turn this from a rant into something informative and helpful. Right now, I see this video as akin to the Verge's PC build- something crafted by someone clearly inexperienced who is attempting to present as an expert. So let's bring in an expert.
     
    Linux does have a lot of issues which can hamper the user experience. However, "I did a thing I was warned not to do several times" is not an issue with Linux. Linux gives you great power and great responsibility. Don't delete system32. The funny thing is that he probably could have fixed his issue by simply reinstalling the removed packages, a 20 min fix tops.
     
    I'd also like to complain about Linus' weird standoffish opposition to the command line. The CLI is well documented and quite simple to use once you've gotten past the learning curve (which can be difficult, I'll admit, but you have to start somewhere). For many things it's easier than a GUI would be, so nobody has made a GUI for it. Complaining that there's no way to do something while ignoring the way most people do half of the things is patently ridiculous.
     
    Finally, Linux is not a free clone of Windows. It's a different platform and you need to approach it differently. Linus saying that Linux "doesn't do x thing in this way" is a result of him trying to apply the "Windows way" to Linux, which is guaranteed to fail. Imagine someone coming from a paper filing system making a video about Windows. They might complain about any number of things not working the same way or some part of their workflow breaking. They might wonder why it needs to be so complex. The thing is that this isn't Windows' fault. They need to learn how to use the system first, and then they might discover how they can use this new workflow even more efficiently than their old one. The existence of a learning curve is not an indictment of an operating system. Yes, Linux takes work to learn. So does Windows. Windows doesn't get a pass because it's the default.
     
    so ends my <rant>. This isn't intended to flame anyone or insult Linus. I have a lot of respect for Linus as a tech reviewer. I just take issue with this series and the message it's sending, about Linux and Linus both.
  14. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from Gimmick21 in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    This series, imo, has a fundamental problem that prevents it from broadcasting the right message:
     
    Linus is trying to review Linux.
     
    This series is supposed to be about a newbie's experiences. Linus runs into a lot of problems, some of which are his fault and some of which are not. However, he's not presenting any of these issues as they are. He's complaining about them, as would a reviewer highlighting issues with a product. This is understandable, given LTT's focus as a channel and Linus' background. The thing is that in order to review something, you need to know a lot about it. Linus does not know a lot about Linux, by his own admission. So why is he trying to present his experiences as though they're features of a product? Why is he trying to style himself as an authority?
     
    I think this series would be so much better if Anthony was presenting. As someone who really does know a lot about Linux, he should be analyzing what happens to Linus and Luke and presenting it through the lens of someone who can speak with authority on the subject. That would turn this from a rant into something informative and helpful. Right now, I see this video as akin to the Verge's PC build- something crafted by someone clearly inexperienced who is attempting to present as an expert. So let's bring in an expert.
     
    Linux does have a lot of issues which can hamper the user experience. However, "I did a thing I was warned not to do several times" is not an issue with Linux. Linux gives you great power and great responsibility. Don't delete system32. The funny thing is that he probably could have fixed his issue by simply reinstalling the removed packages, a 20 min fix tops.
     
    I'd also like to complain about Linus' weird standoffish opposition to the command line. The CLI is well documented and quite simple to use once you've gotten past the learning curve (which can be difficult, I'll admit, but you have to start somewhere). For many things it's easier than a GUI would be, so nobody has made a GUI for it. Complaining that there's no way to do something while ignoring the way most people do half of the things is patently ridiculous.
     
    Finally, Linux is not a free clone of Windows. It's a different platform and you need to approach it differently. Linus saying that Linux "doesn't do x thing in this way" is a result of him trying to apply the "Windows way" to Linux, which is guaranteed to fail. Imagine someone coming from a paper filing system making a video about Windows. They might complain about any number of things not working the same way or some part of their workflow breaking. They might wonder why it needs to be so complex. The thing is that this isn't Windows' fault. They need to learn how to use the system first, and then they might discover how they can use this new workflow even more efficiently than their old one. The existence of a learning curve is not an indictment of an operating system. Yes, Linux takes work to learn. So does Windows. Windows doesn't get a pass because it's the default.
     
    so ends my <rant>. This isn't intended to flame anyone or insult Linus. I have a lot of respect for Linus as a tech reviewer. I just take issue with this series and the message it's sending, about Linux and Linus both.
  15. Agree
    RollTime got a reaction from Yoomes Bond in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    This series, imo, has a fundamental problem that prevents it from broadcasting the right message:
     
    Linus is trying to review Linux.
     
    This series is supposed to be about a newbie's experiences. Linus runs into a lot of problems, some of which are his fault and some of which are not. However, he's not presenting any of these issues as they are. He's complaining about them, as would a reviewer highlighting issues with a product. This is understandable, given LTT's focus as a channel and Linus' background. The thing is that in order to review something, you need to know a lot about it. Linus does not know a lot about Linux, by his own admission. So why is he trying to present his experiences as though they're features of a product? Why is he trying to style himself as an authority?
     
    I think this series would be so much better if Anthony was presenting. As someone who really does know a lot about Linux, he should be analyzing what happens to Linus and Luke and presenting it through the lens of someone who can speak with authority on the subject. That would turn this from a rant into something informative and helpful. Right now, I see this video as akin to the Verge's PC build- something crafted by someone clearly inexperienced who is attempting to present as an expert. So let's bring in an expert.
     
    Linux does have a lot of issues which can hamper the user experience. However, "I did a thing I was warned not to do several times" is not an issue with Linux. Linux gives you great power and great responsibility. Don't delete system32. The funny thing is that he probably could have fixed his issue by simply reinstalling the removed packages, a 20 min fix tops.
     
    I'd also like to complain about Linus' weird standoffish opposition to the command line. The CLI is well documented and quite simple to use once you've gotten past the learning curve (which can be difficult, I'll admit, but you have to start somewhere). For many things it's easier than a GUI would be, so nobody has made a GUI for it. Complaining that there's no way to do something while ignoring the way most people do half of the things is patently ridiculous.
     
    Finally, Linux is not a free clone of Windows. It's a different platform and you need to approach it differently. Linus saying that Linux "doesn't do x thing in this way" is a result of him trying to apply the "Windows way" to Linux, which is guaranteed to fail. Imagine someone coming from a paper filing system making a video about Windows. They might complain about any number of things not working the same way or some part of their workflow breaking. They might wonder why it needs to be so complex. The thing is that this isn't Windows' fault. They need to learn how to use the system first, and then they might discover how they can use this new workflow even more efficiently than their old one. The existence of a learning curve is not an indictment of an operating system. Yes, Linux takes work to learn. So does Windows. Windows doesn't get a pass because it's the default.
     
    so ends my <rant>. This isn't intended to flame anyone or insult Linus. I have a lot of respect for Linus as a tech reviewer. I just take issue with this series and the message it's sending, about Linux and Linus both.
  16. Agree
    RollTime got a reaction from AlTech in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    This series, imo, has a fundamental problem that prevents it from broadcasting the right message:
     
    Linus is trying to review Linux.
     
    This series is supposed to be about a newbie's experiences. Linus runs into a lot of problems, some of which are his fault and some of which are not. However, he's not presenting any of these issues as they are. He's complaining about them, as would a reviewer highlighting issues with a product. This is understandable, given LTT's focus as a channel and Linus' background. The thing is that in order to review something, you need to know a lot about it. Linus does not know a lot about Linux, by his own admission. So why is he trying to present his experiences as though they're features of a product? Why is he trying to style himself as an authority?
     
    I think this series would be so much better if Anthony was presenting. As someone who really does know a lot about Linux, he should be analyzing what happens to Linus and Luke and presenting it through the lens of someone who can speak with authority on the subject. That would turn this from a rant into something informative and helpful. Right now, I see this video as akin to the Verge's PC build- something crafted by someone clearly inexperienced who is attempting to present as an expert. So let's bring in an expert.
     
    Linux does have a lot of issues which can hamper the user experience. However, "I did a thing I was warned not to do several times" is not an issue with Linux. Linux gives you great power and great responsibility. Don't delete system32. The funny thing is that he probably could have fixed his issue by simply reinstalling the removed packages, a 20 min fix tops.
     
    I'd also like to complain about Linus' weird standoffish opposition to the command line. The CLI is well documented and quite simple to use once you've gotten past the learning curve (which can be difficult, I'll admit, but you have to start somewhere). For many things it's easier than a GUI would be, so nobody has made a GUI for it. Complaining that there's no way to do something while ignoring the way most people do half of the things is patently ridiculous.
     
    Finally, Linux is not a free clone of Windows. It's a different platform and you need to approach it differently. Linus saying that Linux "doesn't do x thing in this way" is a result of him trying to apply the "Windows way" to Linux, which is guaranteed to fail. Imagine someone coming from a paper filing system making a video about Windows. They might complain about any number of things not working the same way or some part of their workflow breaking. They might wonder why it needs to be so complex. The thing is that this isn't Windows' fault. They need to learn how to use the system first, and then they might discover how they can use this new workflow even more efficiently than their old one. The existence of a learning curve is not an indictment of an operating system. Yes, Linux takes work to learn. So does Windows. Windows doesn't get a pass because it's the default.
     
    so ends my <rant>. This isn't intended to flame anyone or insult Linus. I have a lot of respect for Linus as a tech reviewer. I just take issue with this series and the message it's sending, about Linux and Linus both.
  17. Like
    RollTime reacted to Ashley MLP Fangirl in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    linus chose a bad distro and didn't read the terminal messages. what linus experienced does not happen to 99.999999999% of users
  18. Like
    RollTime reacted to Ashley MLP Fangirl in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    no problem 🙂 
  19. Like
    RollTime reacted to bp_ in Linux HATES Me – Daily Driver CHALLENGE Pt.1   
    What really hurts here (and I mean this empathetically) is seeing someone as obviously smart and capable and bright as Linus not actually represent the average person, but rather embody the Dunning-Kruger effect. I don't mean this as a personal attack or an insult; cognitive biases are just part of the human experience.
     
    Still, it was super avoidable. All Linus had to do was stop at the stop sign:
     

     
    Yes: as a new user you don't know that it is highly unusual behaviour; behaviour so unusual, the error message has no idea what could have happened and speaks in really vague terms of what could or may have happened. However, as someone who is genuinely new at computers, I argue that this would have been where you would have stopped and asked someone. I guess the real missed opportunity here would've been for Linus to actually try and reach out to the community he has been kind of strawmanning on the WAN show for the last few weeks, and see what the human interaction would've been like.
     
    Had Linus even just sat on this for a day, Ubuntu would've checked for and installed updates, and this wouldn't have happened. Of course, you can't do that if you're on a tight video making schedule, but that's not a constraint your average new user would operate under...
     
    Instead, as D&K predicted, Linus didn't know what he was doing, and he didn't anticipate the distances which apt-get was willing to go to make sure that steam could be installed while maintaining every remaining package compatible with every other package. Linus didn't recognize all of the unusual alarms and bells that were ringing, and didn't know what those packages that were being removed did. Linus instead persevered, and now everyone looks stupid.
     
    I hope the takeaway here for would-be adopters is the simple but painful truth: even if you aren't new at computers, you are still new at Linux. You're at risk of making rookie mistakes, and you should be wary of anything going sideways.
     
    The other funny thing is that this experience would probably have been a lot better on a distro that didn't try to make installing Steam easy. Pop_Os! trying to polish this usecase is what caused the disaster in the first place.
     
    Now, is there any excuse for the ISO shipping with a broken Steam package? Unfortunately the reality is that, from a cultural point of view, proprietary software is a second class citizen on Linux; after all, if it breaks, all you get to do is keep both halves while the original developer fixes things up (a wait that historically speaking ends up being rather fruitless). So the steam package was most certainly not tested as thoroughly as (say) the Thai language package for LaTeX. This is going to be true of every Debian-based distro.
     
    I've never used anything other than Ubuntu so I do wonder if the tradeoff for something Arch-based is going to pay off...
  20. Funny
    RollTime got a reaction from OriAr in Building a PC with my 3 Year Old... Again!   
    Copyright infringement AND exploitation! Unacceptable! Guys, join me in taking LMG OFF YOUTUBE!
  21. Agree
    RollTime reacted to Slottr in i want to make windows look like ubuntu   
    Why don't you use ubuntu?
  22. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from SnoopyPaladin89 in Swag bag for a hurting cancer bum?   
    Funny story- There was a competition for who had the most pieces of LTT merch. I went up and would have won, if not for them not counting all of my 11 pins due to some of them being duplicates. The clip is on floatplane if you want to see it!
     
    I'd also like to say to @RILEYISMYNAME and @James: Those pins were totally valid, you assholes! /s
     
     
  23. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from BobbyPdue in Swag bag for a hurting cancer bum?   
    Funny story- There was a competition for who had the most pieces of LTT merch. I went up and would have won, if not for them not counting all of my 11 pins due to some of them being duplicates. The clip is on floatplane if you want to see it!
     
    I'd also like to say to @RILEYISMYNAME and @James: Those pins were totally valid, you assholes! /s
     
     
  24. Like
    RollTime got a reaction from BobbyPdue in Swag bag for a hurting cancer bum?   
    I’ll give it a shot if I get the chance. I’ll let you know what I get!
  25. Agree
    RollTime got a reaction from Chronified in Swag bag for a hurting cancer bum?   
    Well, they were for charity. 
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