

It makes me sad we didn’t collectively agree on using tabs for all indentation so people can set their preferred indentation size in their editors.
That said, consistency trumps philosophy.
It makes me sad we didn’t collectively agree on using tabs for all indentation so people can set their preferred indentation size in their editors.
That said, consistency trumps philosophy.
When I started, it was only GNUCash as a free option. Never tried anything else. It fits my needs as a family very well.
There’s no mobile or web access, and that’s fine for me. Updating it is something done once a week or less for me anyway.
I manage mortgage, virtual account for kids allowances, budget for future expenditures, and have a set of reports that I refresh to keep tabs on my money and goals.
You’re right, the explicit permission is only the other way around.
I like how you describe the Don’t Care licenses, aka permissive licenses. A lot of people fall for the narrative that more strict licenses are a burden for other open source developers, and then regret their decision when Evil Corp does what they usually do.
AGPL and GPL v3 are explicitly compatible, IIRC. You can run into some trouble with v2.
I use GNUCash with the file on a NAS. I’ve been using GC for over 20 years, I just don’t see myself changing soon.
I don’t disagree with you, but Fireship’s videos are short and to the point.
Mine worked out of the box on mint. Like, it detected the network HP shitbox and I could print, no user intervention. I was floored.
Nope.
“Welcome to Costco. I love you.”
You almost blew my mind out there.
Having experienced Flatpak bloat and seeing your posts here, I might just have been converted. The Flatpak integration on my distro is neat though. But I already use Aptitude for most of my package management needs, so I guess adding AM to my toolbox doesn’t seem too bad.
For regular apps? Like a media player?
Asking the real questions here.
Because I absolutely NEED 144 Hz in my turn-based strategy game.
Thank you so much!
Use the link function and add an exclamation mark in front of it to embed the image, like this: 
Right? Look at the craft!
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After Mozilla is dead.