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hitmyspot @aussie.zone
Posts 3
Comments 1.6K
What's the most "set and forget" Linux distro that's still flexible these days?
  • I've never really used Linux as a daily driver. Back in the same Ubuntu period as you, intrialled it but got sick of software compatibility problems. So much is cloud web based these days, that it's less of an issue.

    What surprised me as a distro hopped looking for my home laptop flavourz was how different it was to install different software, such as docker. Some distros it was a hassle to run well. Some it needed workarounds, whichh surprised me.

    So, I'd look at what you plan to run, then decide between opensuse, pop, mint or fedora and how easy they support what you want to do. I dipped back into Ubuntu but they have started to make some m$ style choices where you have to take back control as they try to make your PC act like they want not how you want.

    All can be made to support whatever you want but not all do our of the box.

  • China must face ‘higher cost’ for backing Russia in Ukraine, says next EU foreign policy chief
  • Yes, when China first started supporting Russia, much commentary noted that and made the point that Russia was desperate for allies and products and China anted to increase influence, so could use the increased relationship to their advantage to exert control over Russia, through the use of financial tools.

  • China must face ‘higher cost’ for backing Russia in Ukraine, says next EU foreign policy chief
  • Yes, nobody wants tariffs, but China is already facing them from USA, so they are more at risk.bthe EU won't want retaliation from China but they also don't want Russia to continue to affect their economy and stability. China would have to choose and they would choose Europe as they are not natural allies with Russia anyway, and Russia won't buy much off them. China needs huge amounts of resources, some of which Russia has, but they are moving away from fossil fuels faster than europe and USA and Russia.

  • Who was the biggest Karen you have encountered in Public?
  • Good job on not serving her. Unfortunately in service culture where the customer is always right, there often is no blowback from customers being rude or unreasonable. There needs to be pushback, even small victories are still a win.

  • Deserved?
  • Some of those negative stereotypes were started as a method to dehumanise and control. As one of those stereotypes that notes racism each time I'm in the UK, it's definitely not a case of British people thinking they are not better than others.

  • Oopsies
  • Yes, you can choose to lay out your wishes. Many do, just like opt in or opt out organ donation. However, if you don't lay out your wishes, you will still end up buried or cremated or something similar without consent.

    I'm not saying that's wrong. We can't just leave dead bodies where they lie. It also provides comfort to families to practice burial rites. My point is that technically you are still making decisions about what to do with somebodies body parts without consent, as they can no longer consent. Is there really a difference? If they care that much, will they just opt out?

    I know some countries, they used to let you specify which organs, but then people opted out of eyes. So they removed the option and it was just donor or not. People still consented, without opting out of eyes. Is that better, or is that manipulating consent?

  • Oopsies
  • We don’t get their consent to be buried or cremated or whatever else people do with the remaining bodies of their loved ones. It’s just opt out. Why should organ donation, which provides a societal and personal benefit be different?

  • An overdose of Atlanticism has put Europeans at risk
  • Yes, but even Meloni and Trump are more liberal than their counterparts from previous bouts of fascism.

    I wonder if the increasing complexity of our economies and societies is insulating us a little from the worst effects, even if some of that complexity is driving the lurch right for those who are feeling the pain

  • Trump Is Handing China a Golden Opportunity on Climate | Already a leader in clean tech, China may see a new reason to act as leader in addressing climate change, too.
  • Not on a per person basis. China also does the most to combat climate change, purely by virtue of its population. It also does the most research, has the most homed people, has the most fed people, delivers the most babies etc etc.

    When dealing with different countries with wildly different populations, it's the amount per person and change per person that counts the most.

    Unfortunately, by dividing by country, it becomes a game theory problem in that the actions you do don't have an effect. It's collective actions that work. As this becomes more imperative, the cost of those not acting will not be borne by countries that are and they will be punished in trade tariffs.

  • Trump Is Handing China a Golden Opportunity on Climate | Already a leader in clean tech, China may see a new reason to act as leader in addressing climate change, too.
  • I would also expect an I crease in carbon tariffs worldwide. They are allowable under wto rules and with the USA implementing tariffs, other countries will seek ways to do the same while protecting themselves. The USA not following two rules would be a boon to China and Russia to ignore patent laws. It will be carrot and stick.

  • An overdose of Atlanticism has put Europeans at risk
  • I think that most western countries are converging on economic, taxation and liberal values that align. As developing countries catch up, to meet entry criteria, I expect it will expand east and south, potentially with some trading partners joining or aligning more closely. As the block gets bigger, it becomes more important to trade with, so it may hit a point where everyone wants in, but has to follow their rules. Or it stagnates and never gets there and dissolves over time, either because it's no longer needed or it's not fit for purpose.

    I think the next 20 years will be telling, especially what happens to Britain and Ukraine in that time.

  • An overdose of Atlanticism has put Europeans at risk
  • I get that, which is why my response pointed out that it's not as simple as a majority of a veto, but that France/Germany combined has a large population bloc that means without them, it's very unlikely to happen.

    Each countries sovereignty remaining is part of the EUs strength, but also it's weakness. Things like immigration are a trans continent problem and variations in policy, numbers of immigrants and refugees is problematic, even with Schengen. Cross border policies while retaining sovereignty are very difficult. Complex, and difficult to gain consensus.

    The opacity of all this, with much of the EU business less visible than national governments, means there is less political capital to make things happen quicker when needed.

  • Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu says he and Donald Trump 'see eye to eye' on Iran
  • He doesn’t abandon them. He was never with them. He is only for himself and expects loyalty but never offers it.

    It’s crazy how many people have been suckered in with the hope of riches, only to have their lives destroyed.

  • An overdose of Atlanticism has put Europeans at risk
  • Yes, and there are loose coalitions between those disparate parties. Usually 65% of the EU population needs to be represented by how it works. A majority of states with a majority of people voting for something to pass. So France and Germany can hold things up with just a few smaller states. As it happens, France and Germany are more inclined to want to advance the EU rules rather than hold them up, but their combined size gives them an oversized power, which is not necessarily a bad thing given how many people they represent.

    Greece was frustrated by Germany when they had to practice austerity. Germany often pushes for financial rules that are beneficial to their export economy.

  • Firefox @fedia.io hitmyspot @aussie.zone

    Using containers for different accounts

    I’m trying to set containers for some websites on a shared windows terminal with multiple users under the same login. We use some cloud software and each user has their own log in. Manually opening websites in container manager allows this, but I’m struggling to do so for opening in container for the home page.

    Each log in just launches in the default container (unassigned). I’ve tried using bookmark tree, which seems to support containers, but I can’t get it to work. Assigning a site to always open in a container doesn’t seem to work either as it’s the same site for multiple users (which seems to be the purpose of multi account container), so if it always opens in container A, person B still needs to manually open in their container.

    2

    bug with exiting images

    I just recently got the 190 update pushed. It mentioned lots of fixes. One was image handling.

    I have found that now exiting an image is a bit slow or glitchy. A single gesture to go back does not exit and instead it needs two. Tapping an image instead still closes it but there is a delay that wasnt there before.

    I'm on a pixel 7pro with gesture navigation.

    3

    bug - refreshing after data outage unresponsive

    My phone coverage stopped for a period. I was using connect at the time and a comment failed. I initially thought it was a big but noted after restarting, it still was out. Then I checked with a test search to find it was all internet.

    A few minutes later internet was back. Went back into Lemmy and refreshed. No data showing. I checked down-for-me for my instance and it was up. Refreshed again. No data.

    Again restarted app and it was fine then. So, it seems he connection outage did not allow refresh after it came back, despite a restart during the outage.

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