

Yeah, I really liked LXDE.
Yeah, I really liked LXDE.
Yep. I’ve had no problems with x11. It’s always been super stable.
TBH, I’ve always wanted to do this.
I use XFCE, but I like Cinnamon too. I use Nemo and Xed instead of Thunar and…whatever.
At some point, probably after Fedora stops supporting x11, openSUSE plans to follow suit, and it will no longer be available in the repos. There’s no firm date for when this will occur, though. I read about it on the official forum.
I use XFCE. If their Wayland support isn’t ready when openSUSE Tumbleweed eliminates support for x11, I’m not sure what I’ll go to.
deleted by creator
Good to know, even though I’m not a Gnome user. I wonder if it will work with torsocks.
Yep, that’s the one.
This sounds interesting. I may try it. What spices do you use?
I use LACT. It’s very easy to use and works well.
I’m not so sure that it is an edge case. I’m just an average person. I’m sure there are many people who have reason to receive and/or save much larger volumes of email than I do. Regardless, it’s always better to have software that works well under a wide range of circumstances.
The p2p aspect is what interests me, though.
Dnscrypt-proxy lets you select dns servers based on whether they filter traffic, keep logs, use DNSSEC, etc. You can also block specific providers, such as Google or Cloudflare.
I use it on desktop when I’m trying to rephrase something I’ve written to make my meaning more clear or improve the flow.
Thank you for your service.
I’ve seen BLT pizza, which sounds similar. I didn’t know salad pizza was a thing. It sounds like it might be really good or really bad depending on the freshness of the ingredients and the balance of softness to crispiness.
Never thought about potatoes on pizza, but potatoes are good in anything IMO.
Sylpheed has all the features I would expect an email client to have, and they all work. No reason to change anything, unless email as a technology changes, or it stops building.
W2k was the best.