It's shame, if only the ideology wasn't born in an anglophone country maybe this common misconception would have never been a thing in the first place.
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I think it's just like preparing to copy in a hard test, you spend all that time devising the best strategy when you could have spent the same or less just studying and also getting the benefits of actually learning
Lol, that's a pity.
I'm lucky it came out after I completed my high school degree or I would have totally fallen for that trap, understanding the importance of internalizing fundamentals should be immediate, but we're all too lazy to face the truth until it bites us (yes pun intended)
Are you a fox by chance?
Him: pulling up Chat GPT
You: *loads shotgun*
That's actually really cool, I never experienced lucid dreams so that's why I was asking.
I feel like I'm writing a bug report to god lmao
Got it, removing dreams altogether in the next patch, enjoy the void suckers ;)
I've been loving it honestly, I used to mess up my systems pretty often in a way that upgrading to new releases had to be done from the command line because of random repositories I added, so things felt unstable.
Immutable systems on the other hand are dumbass (me) proof and I can still do what I used to do with those repos in safe environments or Flatpak now that it has become so ubiquitous for packaging.
Immutability is not a must, even though I really like the philosophy, in fact, if you're comfortable with what you have, you might be fine just converting over your current OS to btrfs.
Good luck, whichever option you try!
You can try doing an in-place conversion, here's a guide and the official documentation, remember to BACKUP and TEST your BACKUP at least twice, if things don't go well, you'll be able to fall back.
If you want to avoid all the setup headache, just reinstall with btrfs by default (I suggest Fedora Silverblue or openSUSE Tumbleweed for that) of course you'll still have to backup, just your data though, to be restored on the new system
I can feel the diabeTS
"Ever" may be a bit pessimistic, Cinny is going the right way, not totally there yet, but it is their objective
Not necessarily, even if everything is determined randomly we still end up without free will, because then it's not us that somehow introduce the randomness from both outside and within the system, it is randomness itself that makes us