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Echedelle (she/her)
Echedelle (she/her) @ echedeylr @lemmy.blahaj.zone
Posts
3
Comments
83
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • This blog was classified as "parked" by Palo Alto urlfiltering service.

    I just reported is a personal website about computer and cybersecurity.

  • Is described in the website I linked.

    Install libaacs with vlc in Ubuntu (search on synaptic) then follow the website.

  • I read in the wikipedia that the author started to use only masc pronouns after 2021.

  • :c

    Is always the same shit.

    Also I read the author did this

    and The Fire Never Goes Out and the cocreator of Lumberjanes and was the showrunner for the award-winning Netflix series She-Ra and the Princesses of Power.

    The Fire Never Goes Out, Lumberjanes: I need to check them.

  • https://vlc-bluray.whoknowsmy.name/

    Did not try but the library tyeg are mentioned ia in Debian and Ubuntu repos so you only need to download there the keysdb.

    Installing libblueray2 library would also install libaacs0 library for this in Debian.

    If it does not work: either the KEYSDB is outdated or the encryption of your blue ray is BD+ (libbdplus), which requires other library and other set of keys.

  • I hope is not like Spar Natura here in Spain where they charge you even more for vegan stuff.

    Cheaper to go just to your local HiperDino to get it.

  • I relate a lot with the second thing. Happens mostly when I speak or because I see the other people eating and I feel I need to eat faster to be able to intersct with them.

    Not speaking, eating alone, listening to music/news, help.

    The being shown food is a difficult thing though. Taking water sometimes removed my hunger in those cases (as most times is just that).

  • It would be preferable if they were hosted in either Czechia or Spain mew.

    Specially knowing how anti-immigration policies, criminalisation of pro-palestinian movements and the current ascendance of fascism...

  • This person is really privileged mew

  • No, and also is possible this is due to Debian 13 release plus increment in Lemmy usage in the past years.

    I did not notice this before.

    I am more around Debian community.

  • Yes.

    Ubuntu 24.04 is equivalent to Debian 13, except Ubuntu 24.04 was released last year.

    Every Ubuntu version is based on a copy of Debian Sid, which is the unstable branch.

    Eventually, they incorporate Debian patches too but keep some packages in different versions (libpng, the kernel, openssl and similar are the most I remember but they change between releases).

  • I will try to reply when I am in the bus to the job.

    Really too long and got me in the morning ritual before I take the bus.

  • Finding new doctor is the worse experience every.

    Here in public health your town gets a few of them, and you can only change between those.

    The procedure takes days, more days to take new appointments and then to suffer the issues again.

    That is really shit. You get no spoons to even start again.

  • Related to the thing: I like mature and safe transitions, specially if is supposed to run in production.

    From my POV, and knowing I already take care if something for new Debian releases, Ubuntu, even in LTS, is the worse what I could wish because they release unreleased and/or unstable software, which did not even pass Debian releases statuses.

  • I meant in Lemmy I dont see complaints or bugs reported so much about Debian.

  • I dont usually see many despiste the typical arch linux, fedora or similar "exotic" distro user who used it years ago.

    Or maybe someone who suddenly jumped into it.

    I use Debian in container images and servers. Almost everything I touch whenever I have the option.

    I only use Ubuntu when expectated, required or asked specifically by customer or such.

  • Ubuntu has issues in every LTS (this time with APT version shipped) because Ubuntu releases are based on Debian Sid (basically unreleased Debian software which they "patch" later including unstable version of tools).

    I suffer this in my job every time a Ubuntu LTS is shipped previous to the release of the Debian version equivalent to it (Ubuntu 24.04 is Debian 13 with mixed versions of packages and "patches") and a customer or a teammate upgrade a container-image or workstation to it...

    I even use Debian new versions after either 1 year or the first .1 release.