Valid criticism. It’s good to get an idea of what’s going on in the media landscape. It’s not good as a high quality source.
Valid criticism. It’s good to get an idea of what’s going on in the media landscape. It’s not good as a high quality source.
I think it’s too early to have final numbers. These are just the cases first published as propaganda.
For 3000 exploded pagers this is very low collateral.
The NYT article contains no mention of ambulances or medical staff. Do you have a source?
However every military organization has medics. They are protected under international law if they don’t participate in fighting and wear a visible identification.
Getting different perspectives is very valuable for sure. You learn which inconvenient facts are left out by each side.
A very targeted attack.
ground news is really good.
These are more likely to be used as support workers or for cleaning up debris.
It’s like switiching to only organic ice cream from regular one.
Yes, the software might depend on outdated technology like oil burner heating and you want to transition to solar with a heat pump.
The longer you live in a place the more crap you will accumulate in your home. Windows need to be cleaned. Walls need to be painted. There’s this one tap, that’s fixed with some wire and tape.
Tech debt is like that just for software.
Transitioning a tech stack will lead to tons of unforeseen problems and also add zero new features. It’s only very rarely useful.
I have both! Lots of stale bookmarks and tons of open tabs.
Mountain Duck and Cryptomator
Yes, you’re holding a sentient being as a slave for your amusement.
Maybe donate 50 cents for every hour you used the software and it was useful to you.
That would be 1000 €$ per year if you work with Linux full time.
Let’s see some commercial software:
Microsoft Office 365 is 70 $€ per year. Adobe Suite around 700 $€ per year. IntelliJ IDEA about 170 $€ per year. Affinity Suite is 170 $€ once. Reaper is 60 €$ for a discounted license. Full featured media player like Elmedia costs 20 $€. BBEdit costs 60.
The FOSS windows and Mac FTP client Cyberduck asks for a minimum 10 €$ donation. It won’t prompt you for a donation if you bought a license. The Duck applications are all pretty nice.
No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.
You are right, I remember something about Linux users paying more than Windows users and Apple users paying the most for HumbleBundle. The number of small paid applications is low compared to macOS.
Corporations and governments are already paying Red Hat or similar companies for their services and development. Their use cases aren’t the same as the average desktop users though. Linux makes for a great thin client for web applications for example. That’s very far from Audio and video workstation applications.
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