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They posted it to any community that had “music” in the name regardless of if it fit. Either a spam bot or those annoying people who think more is always better when it comes to getting your name out there.
They posted it to any community that had “music” in the name regardless of if it fit. Either a spam bot or those annoying people who think more is always better when it comes to getting your name out there.
I would say anything that can’t be played in a browser isn’t going to work. The reason you can’t run Windows .exes is because Chromebooks are Linux based. I’m not sure how locked down Chromebooks are since I’ve never personally tinkered with one.
Cause it’s good to know of something is an installed package at a glance. I also imagine it would reduce the risk of accidentally overwriting your own scripts if the packages happen to have the same name as your local scripts.
I buy the the digital release to support the band and just keep listening on Spotify. At that point the band won’t get more money out of me for the songs and I get the covience of Spotify
Well I guess if you need scripts to work in a mixed Windows/Linux environment that makes sense. On the other hand the few times I have to touch powershell it’s so verbose and cryptic at the same time, so I think I’ll stick with bash personally.
Is the secret the penguin walk?
Warum nicht alle fünf?
That’s one take away. An alternative I’ve seen is that it’s much harder to become an admin. The alternative makes sense to me, but definitely still be an issue since most people only have so much free work they’re willing to put in.
Can they just give it to the public domain? I’m sure Wikipedia would other copy left systems, but for kid content I could see it being less important.
It’s getting into the realm of law where the answer is almost always “it depends”
Fair point. I think I’m just too used to dealing with the bullshit of building the packages myself cause I find it fun. Definitely not viable for commercial use.
You know there are distros other than Ubuntu and CentOS right?
Everyone has good answers but I would check the license of more obscure libraries to just be sure you’re not violating it. GitHub has a handy feature that explains the license (if one exists) in easy to understand terms. I’ve never ran into this issue myself but it’s a good habit to have. Especially when you’re working for a company.
You had the perfect opportunity to mention you use arch and wasted it!
That’s exactly why I still have a Facebook and am seriously considering reviving my 0 post Instagram
And keep it that way! We need people on both sides to further spur progress. Plus I’m jealous cause I still don’t have a firm grasp on docker.
That’s a horrible thing to do to someone
While not technically a school computer. In college we all had to install a WiFi client to access the school’s WiFi. It was shit so I started digging around and found the localization files in plain txt. I then, when I had the opportunity to, booted into a friend’s computer with Linux and changed the confirm button to say “I’m a bitch”. They never asked me to change it, which I would’ve, so it just stayed like that all year.
How should he know? He’s a new user after all.