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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 22nd, 2024

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  • In this case I think its probably a hallucination, but in the future people are absolouitly going to try optimising for ai search. At this point, it seems a natural progression for businesses doing seo(search engine optimisation).

    How blatently catfishy that would be i’m not sure…doing it outright like that I don’t think would be as effective. Especially with FOSS stuff, the market for people looking for that and won’t check is unfortunately quite small.


  • If you want something that looks different you wanna find a different desktop environment(DE), most of them are avalible on most distros. I’d pick a distro then a DE that they offer. You could try these DEs you haven’t already tested:

    • Cosmic, think tilling + gnome-like interface. It softens the learning curve for a tilling WM a lot if you’ve got other options. Fedora has a spin with this in if you liked fedora.
    • Budgie but can be quite similar to others
    • MXLinux with Fluxbox could be an interesting choice, its usually used on low end devices but its pretty snappy on anything else. Or Fluxbox on any other distro but MX is the only thing I can think of with it as an install option.
    • If you don’t mind something older, you could look at CDE or NsCDE, although I can’t remember how involved the install process is.

    Other than that, your options for non-tranditional desktop environments are probably just other tilling ones(i3, hyprland, ect) or scrolling(like niri). Or customising one of the others, KDE can be very flexible for that. You’ve gone through a lot of the main ones.

    As for distros, there’s a lot, most will have the same set of desktop environments though. So, the same look and feel one you get past the install and package management etc…

    If you don’t mind going outside linux land, haiku can be fun. Completely different OS though…






  • yeah I admit ‘apple caved’ was kinda just a gut reaction ‘apple bad - encrypted backup good’.

    If they fully caved we likely wouldn’t have known about it, they’d have just put in a backdoor and given themselves and/or the uk encryption keys. Denying encrypted backups because of this is probably best.

    You could argue apple does have the resources for a a legal battle, but you also can’t really expect them to do that. They’re not liberty or big brother watch. I doubt that would go well in domestic courts anyway, after that, the ECHR could be sympathetic on proportionallity & art.8 grounds but its a lot of effort.

    maybe I should edit the title?