

I hack at night, when it’s cooler. You can’t see the digital rain otherwise.
they/them


I hack at night, when it’s cooler. You can’t see the digital rain otherwise.


You could try Chawan. That’s quite good.
You also have the usual selection of Links2 (text mode), Lynx, and w3m; but most modern websites will not work very well (if at all).


On those specs? Well, you could try Librewolf and ungoogled-chromium, but I imagine they’ll be a tad sluggish.
NetSurf, Dillo, and Links2 are more suited to low-power machines, but they don’t support HTML5. Also, NetSurf’s JavaScript implementation is fairly old, and the other two don’t support JS at all. Furthermore, Links2 doesn’t support CSS (by design).


Ew


deleted by creator
I do like watching GrammaCrackers, though.


What paywall‽


React.


(laughs in void)
Examples:


Myanmar be cutting off its nose to spite its face.


Rule-wise, this seems fair.
Regardless, if AI usage continues to increase in this manner, I’ll likely be driving NetBSD, AROS, and FreeDOS by the end of the decade.
Maybe even a little TempleOS or ZealOS, for flavour.


I have a friend IRL called Kit, who also happens to use they/them pronouns.
Way to just say the same thing a bunch of times.


Well, yes; after all, I have been able to modify even proprietary software to fit my own preferences; but it’s clear (and also explicitly stated) that it’s supposed to be used mostly as-it-comes.
I can’t say I’ve tried Niri or PaperWM before, but if they’re based on GNOME then maybe I’m being a little harsh.
Thanks for the complements!


Obviously check out Eylenburg’s page and the ArchWiki, but here are my two cents on a bunch of DEs:
Note: The weight of a DE is comparitive. “Heavy” DEs (such as GNOME) can still be swift on lower spec machines.


Slackware, Gentoo, the Mandriva family (OpenMandriva, Mageia, PCLinuxOS, ROSA, ALT Linux), Void, Alpine, Chimera, Venom, CRUX, Exherbo, Paldo, the PiSi family (PiSi Linux, old versions of Pardus), and Solus (eopkg is a fork of PiSi).
Get this nazi website out of here.