

Exactly. I had to look up what Jaywalking was, I’d never heard of it before.
Putting toothpaste on your sandwich is not recommended. Not even by dentists.


Exactly. I had to look up what Jaywalking was, I’d never heard of it before.


If you want people to move out of your way when walking, look over their heads or behind them. That unconsciously signals other walkers to move.


How can you go around calling someone you know nothing about a weirdo? Because they’re pansexual? Because they have some sort of disability?
That is extremely callous and shortsighted. Please try to remember the human. By the sound of it, the money is not the reason women don’t consider you particularly dateable. Look up empathy and see if you can improve yours.
Yeah! How could she just say no to that?


Zombie games never really appealed to me, but this does seem fun!
All right, so thinking in solutions here—sandboxed applications, no password prompt for updates, and a more alert-y warning when a password prompt is shown. Surely there’s a distro that does the first two things, already?
And also, if no password is needed for updates, the average user will never see a password prompt. Which would make a clandestine .sh file with a password pop-up inherently more worrying.
I’ll have a look-see at some modern distros, I’m pretty sure the no-password-updates is quite normal these days. Also, that does seem to remove some of the necessity of sandboxed applications, if all applications are installed though the official repositories.
The way Windows handles it is that if updates are coming in through “secure” channels (official OS updates, Store application updates, updates to applications that do not touch any protected areas), administrator permissions are just never required.
As far as I know, that works the same in Linux. Updates come in through the official repository, and you can easily set it up so that no password prompt is needed to have the update install. I imagine many user-friendly distributions do that. Of course, you will need to really get it into the head of new users that they only install things through the package manager and never through the command line.
The UAC prompt has a very specific design and will warn you with an orange colour band if the application is not signed with appropriate certificates. If it’s a suspected dangerous application, the band will be red.
Well, that sounds like something that shouldn’t be too hard to set up on Linux. Something like “you’re installing something that’s not from our official repo… You sure bro?”
in Linux everything is dropped, based on type, to just a couple of “centralised” folders, right?
I’m not so sure if that is true, actually! Sandboxed applications are very much a thing in Linux, and immutable distributions are an extra protection against unwanted tampering.
(I’m not sure if sandboxed is the term here, I’ll be honest. But you know the concept I mean.)
You do have a point—Linux does not warn users against running superuser commands constantly and naggingly. Also not the beginner-friendly distros like Zorin, Mint and Ubuntu (as far as I know).
To me that’s fine, because I know not to just run any command, but my grandma who gets an email from a trustworthy-sounding person telling them to run “sudo install this keyboard logger and Rustdesk scripted installer” will not know better.
So then that begs the question, given you seem to know something about it: how should this be addressed? (I assume you know something about this—I don’t even know what an UAC prompt is.)
On the other hand: How does Windows stop users from running the .exe file a trustworthy-sounding person emailed them? You could argue that’s easier to ask people to do than to open the terminal and write a command in there.
And rightly so! 😇
Hey, at least they got it to work! Progress has to start somewhere.


This was a nice read and the theme looks really nice. Great job on rewriting so much and improving the documentation.


Oh whoops, thanks for the correction!


Sounds like… Dykes. See: The Netherlands.


Though you could say that all those things influence the collective more than the individual, of course.
Great sticker material, too.


Ha! I’ll live 😅 And there’s plenty of modding things I can still buy for it… Keycaps, switches, foam to fill it with…


Just the ones that come with it, for now… I’m watching the online second hand market place of my country for offerings of switches, as I don’t want to spend too much. And it’s better for the environment, too! I’ve heard pretty much all keycaps by the HMX brand are good, so that’s what I have a search alert for.


I got a mechanical keyboard after researching a ton on which one I wanted. second-hand, so I was a bit restricted to what was offered. I’m getting a Keychron V5 Max, which I’m then going to mod with some new keycaps, a tape-mod and possibly filling it up with foam. The YouTube channel Hipyo Tech has been on the top of my YouTube binge list the last few weeks.
I like your username. It paints a picture.