Passionate about capturing moments through photography and videography. Tech enthusiast and programmer on a mission to establish a media production company. Committed to exploring the intersection of technology and creativity. Keen on learning and promoting privacy in our digital age.
Thank you for the very detailed response! I’ll give that book a read, it sounds interesting.
EndeavourOS É A MAIOR DE TODOS.
Not sure why everything was capitalised and in Portuguese when I’m using English at the moment.
I asked a similar question a little while back: https://lemdro.id/post/10600532
It doesn’t really mean much, it’s more of a loophole from what I gathered.
I’ve done an Arch install the “manual” way a handful of times (mainly to say that I did it), but whenever I do an install now, it’s with the script. It’s probably the fastest I have ever installed a workable OS, ever! It works really well at getting what you need without too much fluff.
Just open this link. It will show you a bunch of details about your device/browser.
The other GitHub link will show you the source code, which you could review yourself or maybe help contribute to the project.
It may have been deleted since I can’t find it either
I hate having to manually deselect all of the cookies/consent toggles, just to get to the end and they have the “accept all” look like the “confirm choice”.
Thanks for the explanation!
Legitimate interest makes complete sense with something like an online shop, but trying to read a news article/blog post, do I really need to have 100s of vendors claiming “legitimate interest”?
How does legitimate interest work?
Some vendors are not asking for your consent, but are using your personal data on the basis of their legitimate interest.
I was really interested in this when I saw the ad for it, then I saw the price.
Do you remember the name? I haven’t watched a dinosaur documentary in many years.
Not quite Arch, but I’ve been running EndeavourOS without any issues. It’s been super stable! The only time I’ve had issues is when I’ve messed with the system.
I’m pretty sure it’s using the default GNOME wallpaper.
Good to know, thank you!
I never thought of that. Thanks for the idea
Really thought I was going to be rick-rolled
The cherry on top:
That’s an interesting comment from a guy that used to work for Canonical, and then went anti-snap pretty hard, to the point that he made this:
Curiosity got the better of me a while back. It’s horrifying and incredibly interesting at the same time.