Runterwählen ist kein Gegenargument.
[Verifying my cryptographic key: openpgp4fpr:941D456ED3A38A3B1DBEAB2BC8A2CCD4F1AE5C21]
I wonder why I don’t pay for Lemmy.
These days, things have greatly improved.
Websites will never change their URLs today.
My RSS reader (Newsblur) lets me do that too, to some extent.
Primer:
I know, but most people won’t. :-)
One of the reasons might be that the number of SVN hosting facilities has decreased over the past two decades.
I know, but most people are lazy these days (and self-hosting stuff in the EU has become a legal battle against every week’s new rules).
Oh, come on. It wasn’t that bad! At least it granted (and still grants) the freedom of choosing which VCS shall make your day harder than necessary.
Codeberg is supposedly located in the EU while not requiring self-hosting, maybe that’s why.
At least they’re less obvious about it.
the vast amount of projects hosted there definitely won’t ever move away.
That’s what they said about Sourceforge though.
Good news. Hopefully this will help to finally break the de facto monopoly of Microsoft’s GitHub and bring the distributed aspect of Git - away from gatekeeper platforms - back into the foreground.
I read a lot of music-related blogs, review sites and a few selected magazines. No online “recommendation system” needed.
Wine/Proton: https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/handbook/wine/
NVIDIA: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Graphics#NVIDIA_graphics
OpenBSD is not too great at that, but that’s ok.
Most of them should be available in the native ports/packages. The porters community is rather active. I guess that proprietary applications like Softmaker Office won’t work (they usually refer to specific library versions), but everything else could be worth a try.
That said, FreeBSD and OpenBSD support virtual machines just fine.
It is amazingly resource-friendly and its SMP is being optimized.
No, for speed and/or gaming, I’d recommend DragonFly BSD (or FreeBSD which has a built-in Linux emulator that could - in theory - run Steam). For development, however, the BSDs are generally quite friendly. Note that the BSDs usually use Clang and a POSIX shell (or tcsh) instead of GCC and bash, so you won’t have GNUisms by default.
In many ways.
OpenBSD master race.
The content posted here has no obvious license. I wonder if an administrator could just put any license of his choice on your posts.