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Wouldn’t those be typically handled at an OS level? If you’re using an OS that actually gets updates, you’re only vulnerable to attacks at the kernel or driver level
🏳️⚧️ she/her
Wouldn’t those be typically handled at an OS level? If you’re using an OS that actually gets updates, you’re only vulnerable to attacks at the kernel or driver level
Buying is at least enough that we should still get bluray pirate releases
That’s why they’re broke
That’s… not what they were saying? They were responding to a comment saying it encourages consumerism by saying that they use it for better prices on things they need regardless
My understanding was that they leaked the key that the rabbit backend uses to make requests to elevenlabs, and were just too lazy to change it. I could easily be wrong though
I would imagine that the devices aren’t making elevenlabs requests directly, but just making requests to the rabbit backend, which forwards the responses. if I’m wrong, then that’s quite impressively bad security
Lineage 21 on a Motorola Edge 21 here
For mainstream distros it’s pretty easy
It was written by copilot, thank you very much
The bots aren’t a problem if no humans have to listen to them
Sadly this is just a dev kit. It has soldered memory and only works with emmc storage
Isn’t this why LGPL exists?
It doesn’t need to be MIT, just LGPL
Android already has support*
*assuming you want to use Google messages, and don’t root
you have to charge those though, Voyager doesn’t need charged
Web environment integrity
Not really, just use your DE’s software manager.
This isn’t dependent on distro, but your DE, which determines the entire UI. It’s like complaining the settings menu isn’t consistent between Google’s Android and Samsung’s Android. For reference, under Gnome, you have to install Gnome Tweaks, then just open that and go to Startup Applications in the sidebar.
Heavily depends on what you want to do. Many use cases (such as Minecraft) don’t really need the terminal at all.
Yeah, that’s not at all unique to Linux though
Minecraft Java is officially available on Linux, and should be available in your software manager. Minecraft bedrock is not available officially, but a program called Minecraft Bedrock Launcher is available that will let you run the Android version of the game.
I’m not sure exactly what you mean, but media should be available to mount in the side bar of your file manager
That’s not packages, that’s images. People download images relatively infrequently, but with rolling release distros, people download hundreds of packages on a regular basis
There’s KDE Connect if they’re on the same network. You could also use Dropbox or something, but honestly Discord works fine
Fedora does have a Cinnamon spin. The advantage of Mint is that all the Ubuntu tutorials work on it
Edit: plus Fedora’s philosophy about non-free software makes it less than ideal for people who don’t care