a hungry dog in the streets in my ass
a hungry dog in the streets in my ass
they are shitposting about shitposting shit vegan pet food not shitposting about vegan pet food, very different.
you would think it would take less time to make the change than to justify your actions and create bad will towards the project
did they ever stop being little bitches about pronouns?
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I downloaded it on arch, took forever to compile but has been very nice so far, much prefer how it handles workspaces offer ever other de out there, and the built in auto tiling is amazing.
yes why would a gun need more than one bullet
are you only going to play open source games too?
any authority has no incentive to make laws that are moral, only to make laws that maintain the system. rights are not given to you by an authority they are something you have as a person and cannot be taken away only violated.
if you don’t believe they had the right to own slaves, then they had no rights taken away, if your saying they did have rights taken away then you are saying they had a right to own slaves.
when you say banning slavery took away people’s rights, that means you Believe owning humans is a right.
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all I hear is you think humans have a right to own slaves
didn’t he tell employees who were being sexually harassed to not talk to hr?
sounds cool is there a way to use it on Android?
me and a book of all the best days to buy bitcoin
looking at the GitHub page that was linked it has every feature the others do except built in Nvidia support, and I get how that can be a big deal, but if you have amd or Intel I would rather have the one with all the features.
from what I’m looking at chimera seems better
to answer your question KDE is not arch. Linux has a bunch of distros, you can think of one as a collection of packages. some distros want to do things one way some want to do it others.
the biggest difference between distros for most users are mostly desktop environments and package managers. KDE is the desktop enrollment, there are many others that you could also use, like gnome, or use none at all and only use the terminal. the package manager is how you get new packages and update the ones you already have. examples are apt and pacman.
you can make any distro work like another by installing the same packages, although this may not always be the easiest to do. an easy way to change your experience with Linux is to try a different desktop environment, you can run multiple on the same distro and switch between them, see what you like.
wow I guess I was a horse all along