I’m attempting to normalize calling it CinnaMint. I get a few up votes Everytime I mention it, but I haven’t seen anyone else use it yet.
I’m attempting to normalize calling it CinnaMint. I get a few up votes Everytime I mention it, but I haven’t seen anyone else use it yet.
I ran Puppy as a daily driver for about a year before I finally got a new hard drive for that computer. It’s surprisingly robust for such a tiny footprint.
I got a $50 EOL Chromebook that I loaded CinnaMint (it’s right there… Why say "Mint Cinnamon "…) on.
I use it as my sketchy torrent getting machine, Because if something goes wrong, oh well.
A story like this was told in one of the intros.
Had to let the Republicans know first, so they didn’t cry “fake news” for a week.
Ethernet Over Audio
Isn’t that just a telephone modem?
User: Goes through 15 step process to turn off unwanted “feature”.
Windows: I turned this on, in case it got turned off accidentally. I’ll do this every reboot.
Everything except that monstrosity of a controller.
I dont use tiktok, but I might actually download a FossTok just to normalize FOSS for the masses.
I’ll have to dig out my 3dsxl this weekend. Still packed up from moving a few years ago.
Bet it still has a charge on it, lol
That’s the alias he sells under on Etsy
Early electronics are fascinating. The amount of power we were getting out of devices back in the day is crazy. Like this comment probably takes up more memory than Adventure on the Atari 2600.
I wonder what we could pull off now if people tried to squeeze every ounce of power out of modern day equipment?
The shuttle probably runs on actual mechanical switches
I’d forgotten about the wheels.
The mouse that you have to turn upside down to charge, however…
I would say this is great news all around. With SteamOS pushing the Linux market share higher than it’s ever been, and a partnership with Arch to boost direct development, this could mean other companies taking a hard look at Linux and either developing native software or ensuring proton compatibility out of the gate.
I’m imagining “Runs on Arch” markers on software like the old “Works on Windows '95” stickers I used to see everywhere.