The hype is earnest
If he wants to try plasma just install the x11 version on fedora:
sudo dnf install plasma-workspace-x11
New York has more economic influence on the world than most individual countries. This, economically speaking, is more significant than an eventful election for Australian PM.
+1 for a link to the video please
No feelings hurt, sorry. My point was more so that this isn't the place for throwing insult-ridden fallacies at every person who disagrees with you or, in this thread, simply doesn't talk about other/bigger issues 100% of the time. You're not fostering a great environment for constructive discussions.
For real, I am sorry if my previous comment hurt your feelings. My point was that whataboutism is a common trope over there and serves for nothing except to, ironically, make the whatabouter feel on a moral high ground.
Please be nicer to people, even online, and if you feel they're neglecting something important it might be more useful to be helpful and constructive instead of mean.
Go back to reddit
I'm gonna take a shot and guess you've never run infrastructure in your life if you can't differentiate between a product covered by a license and a service offered as a courtesy.
Your first point seems made up and I couldn't quickly find a source for it; do you have one that I couldn't find?
Ah yes, because the left wing is famous for the proliferation of requiring a government issued ID to use the internet in ways that make them uncomfortable.
I like both of these! Probably worth adding that I'm in a heavy urban area like Chicago
The server we were working at the time wasn't configured with frequent backups, just a full backup once a month as a stop gap until the project got some proper funding. Any sort of remote version control is totally the preventative factor here, but my goal is to help others that have yet to learn that lesson.
Kernel modules can be installed, loaded, and run without a reboot in Linux. TPM support would just ensure that the firmware/kernel and modules loaded at boot are expected.
Edit: basically, TPM support wouldn't really do what a game dev would want for a kernel that can be modified at runtime, unless I'm missing something