

Only when there’s nobody around.
Only when there’s nobody around.
ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass
Someone decided that software books start at 0
Yes I live near a border and I know lots of people who do this.
Yeah I just deleted the swap partition without updating anything. I’ve realized since then I need to update the fstab but I never think about it until the odd time I do a full reboot.
Not only do I get this on shutdown I get a job on startup that runs for a minute thirty that looks for a swap partition that I have deleted.
I did a little reading, and yeah, the core applications remained mostly unchanged from 2000 to XP to 2003. I’m more familiar with 2000 as that’s what I had growing up and that’s probably why I like the flat UI the best.
MS Office pretty much peaked, feature-wise, in like 2003 (or, arguably, 2007
For me it’s Office 2000. The flat UI is so efficient and yeah, there isn’t any features missing that I’ve encountered. Takes no resources to run and works the same if you’re on Windows 95 or 10. My family members still get me to install it if they get a new computer. It is also free to download from the Intetnet Archive.
I use LibreOffice for the most part because I’m on Linux.
That is a situation I had not considered.
A bike on the ISS might be doing 27,600 km/h relative to Earth but the bikes on Earth are travelling at 107,000 km/h relative to the Sun. It’s all about perspective.
The deferens between those operations is vas
I use my PS4 all the time with Jellyfin with no issues. Just have to open it in the browser.
Thank you for posting the masterpiece behind the copy.
Amount of ads my operating system shows me: 1. I’ve got Ubuntu on an old laptop because I couldn’t get Debian to install and I didn’t know much about Mint at the time So I’ve seen a couple Ubuntu Pro popup ads.
Ah, my bad. I thought I had all of the communities blocked.
I love how you can spot a .ml user without checking their instance
Would be better without the red circle
Vicinity of obscenity in your eyes
No but it takes a long time for heat to conduct up a coil vs a straight line. That’s why woodstove handles are often coiled.