You can choose KDE as desktop environment during Debian installation, or replace whatever DE you installed at any time.
You can choose KDE as desktop environment during Debian installation, or replace whatever DE you installed at any time.
It is very usable, provided you pay attention to major upcoming changes. To give you a very recent example, during May they switched the time libraries to use 64 bits, and like others said, it was dependency hell until the tide of all the packages being recompiled passed. In those cases, unless you know EXACTLY what to do, it’s better to wait for updates to come in, let apt sort out what could be updated and what had to wait, and just make sure it doesn’t propose you to delete things. After 2 weeks it was all business as usual. Side note: aptitude (my package manager of choice) was unusable, while apt threaded on and pulled me out of the tangle.
I tried once. Could not figure it out. I’ll leave that to the young people.
Clean install on a new computer. Then upgrades until the computer gets retired. Debian at home, Ubuntu server at work.
I like playing with distros and other OSes in VMs, if the thing doesn’t have a well defined upgrade procedure it gets ditched pretty soon.
You are right. I once heard a pilot say “popping flares”, so that’s my usual choice.
…i don’t want to know how federation of liquids works
You might be able to reset the root password by booting to single user, or using a rescue usb.
That said, you could take the chance to try one of the BSDs.
And don’t forget to defrag, while you are at it.
Except infosec team
I had something like this and if I remember correctly it had to do with antialiasing. Try changing that settings
Meantime, the BSD crowd: “am I a joke to you?”
Are you saying that jabber is the ipv6 of messenger world?
May be our own path to survive the AI rebellion.
Check if you have some accessibility options enabled, disable everything if you don’t need it. I have xfce on 2 older laptops and it doesn’t do that.
reminds me of “In the world, there is space for 5 computers” or something along those lines
Good riddance, I guess?
Wait until you hear about Boring Company 's rogue tunnel diggers…
I miss HTC
sorry, I should have replied as top comment. I meant that on plain debian you can put executables in /etc/update-motd.d. That should do, otherwise have a look at libpam-motd , or steal the systemd scripts from an ubuntu install
Unfortunately falcon self updates. And it will not work properly if you don’t let it do it.
Also add “customer has rejected the maintenance window” to your list.