It's so nice of elongated Muskrat and the orange Pumpkin to be the first of their kind, to publically display Swasticars in such bold fashion - in recent times
NudeNewt
Pop! _OS, provided you know how to find specific wifi modules (drivers) for laptops like Macbook or Broadcam devices in general.
I've got some documentation somewhere on the topic let me see if I can find it.
In any case for now I suggest looking it up, it can be installed on literally anything. I installed it on multiple Macbooks using Ubuntu WiFi drivers (both free and non-free WiFi modules) to gain full functionality Wifi-wise.
For the most part "wl" will be available for your device (foss wifi module) so for most devices you'll be fine right outta the box. And, in the event bluetooth is missing, by installing "blueman" for Bluetooth capabilities.
For most if not all Windows devices (amd64, amd86, intel, NVidia, etc) it can be installed in one fell swoop.
Best part, you can encrypt your data using the same password you use to login. It's one of the first things you see before confirming the installation to your device.
And the installer is intuitive and really user-friendly.
In terms of DE's it is as versatile as Ubuntu, it is after all, compatible with most - if not all, Ubuntu repositories.
You can use the default DE GNOME to make your device look like Windows Vista.
You can, alternatively use KDE Plasma to make it look like it's Windows 7 using the sddm display manager.
It's as versatile as any other distro but with an easy installer, you literally just press buttons. Obviously you've gotta wipe the data on the drive. So here's to hoping you've either made backups or, have made peace with the death of that drive.
In any case, failing drives are as easy to fix as telling the drive to ignore the damaged sectors.
Pop!_OS is like Ubuntu if it had Debian's stability IMO. It's been fantastic thus far and I highly recommend it. They also have very extensive documentation!
I sure hope so, she's got what it takes.
I can combine the two and do indeed get better contrast on this map, but it seems to cause a loss of visible green color in other places.
In that case I'd recommend DaltonLens for more granular control. Should work perfectly for your use-case. Combine it with the default color picker and you'll be set.
bro.
This is the only time in history that I will welcome, with open arms, the FBI, CIA, NSA, or even the military taking over the government. This has to stop, if they aren't, the USA will be no more. Line up the entire administration in the firing range.
Nuremberg trials be damned, do what the constitution demands: Complete eradication of domestic terrorists.
That is unless this is a CIA plot... /s
If on Windows 10 I recommend using the default system color picker: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/use-color-filters-in-windows-43893e44-b8b3-2e27-1a29-b0c15ef0e5ce#WindowsVersion=Windows_10
If on Windows 11 use: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/directx/enhanced-color-filter-controls-for-windows-11/
If on Mac use: https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/use-color-filters-mchl11ddd4b3/10.15/mac/10.15
Supports MacOS Catalina 10.15 to MacOS Sequoia 15.
If on Linux, it depends.
If using a GNOME DE use: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/5589/colorblind-filters/
If using Cinammon DE use: https://cinnamon-spices.linuxmint.com/applets/view/384
If using KDE plasma DE use: https://userbase.kde.org/Color_Management
This one is honestly bonkers in terms of customization, but be aware that it is very much in it's beta stage.
For XFCE and pretty much any other DE use: https://github.com/DaltonLens/DaltonLens?tab=readme-ov-file
Supports:
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macOS: Mojave (10.14) and newer are supported (including Apple Silicon)
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Windows: only tested on Windows 10, but anything more recent than Windows 8.1 should work
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Linux: only tested on Ubuntu 20.04, but should work on any distribution that has gtk3 and libappind
Hope this helps, cheers!
Do you not have colorblind mode enabled on your device?
This seems to be the main issues with his apps. Visibility is scarce beyond the original post, wherein even with followers the chances of someone seeing your post beyond that honeymoon phase dwindles.
The only exception are users with lots of followers. From what I've seen in my brief time using Pixelfed for example, it's usually accounts with at least a few hundred followers that see a highet retention of visibility.
Yes and no. Some is, yes, but a lot isn't. After all how do you think ISIS was able to get those black hawks running in the first place?
And if you've ever read through leaked training manuals you'd be shocked by how easy it is to get around whatever DRM some stuff has.
- **Your IP address is not exposed** to users or the websites they access
Can anyone confirm this to be the case?
Remember folks, to avoid Linux ISO honeypots you must enable Super-Seeding.