missing a link?
missing a link?
Not sure about erasing all of it, but it is (or was) certainly possible to delete enough of it to brick a motherboard https://www.phoronix.com/news/UEFI-rm-root-directory
I don’t know where you got the idea that I’m arguing that old versions don’t get new vulnerabilities. I’m saying that just because a CVE exists it does not necessarily make a system immediately vulnerable, because many CVEs rely on theoretical scenarios or specific attack vectors that are not exploitable in a hardened system or that have limited impact.
The fact that you think it’s not possible means that you’re not familiar with CVSS scores, which every CVE includes and which are widely used in regulated fields.
And if you think that always updating to the latest version keeps you safe then you’ve forgotten about the recent xz backdoor.
Just because it has a CVE number doesn’t mean it’s exploitable. Of the 800 CVEs, which ones are in the KEV catalogue? What are the attack vectors? What mitigations are available?
You did a recursive chown or chmod, didn’t you.
Here’s a third one: They have a Welcome Stamp visa program where you can work remotely from there for a year, and it’s renewable. You can even bring your family. Under this program you only pay income tax on your country of origin.
Apple may provide repairs, but if the repair costs as much as a new device then it’s planned obsolescence in disguise.
To be fair though, the chance that every Lemmy instance goes down at the same time is so much lower than Reddit going down. Sure, my instance might be unavailable, but I’d be able to hop onto the next one and continue.
What’s the scale? It might be a passable seafood fork.
I’m surprised that no one has suggested classic point and click adventure games other than Grim Fandango:
Someone mentioned Ultima VII. If you’re into RPGs then check out the Wizardry series, Blade of Destiny, Betrayal at Krondor, and Dungeon Siege. Oh, and Final Fantasy VII (original) and VIII.
Also take a look at the GoG catalogue for games released before 2010 or so. Most non-AAA games should run on your system.
Bazzite, as a gaming-first distribution, makes some choices that are acceptable for such a platform, but that I believe are unacceptable in a secure development environment. This is why I wrote “not ideal” instead of “bad”. If you don’t care about security then it’s perfectly cromulent. But I value security, so I would not recommend it.
Bazzite is a good HTPC or living room gaming distro. It is not an ideal all purpose desktop distro, just like a Steam Deck is not an ideal all purpose desktop system.
If you want a Bazzite-like experience that is better suited for the desktop then use Fedora Silverblue, which is what Bazzite/ublue builds upon.
My mistake. I read your post as you using VMWare Workstation on Fedora, not the other way around.
Your other options are Virtual Box by Oracle or head down the Xen path.
Or, since OP is on Linux, a native KVM option like virt-manager or boxes.
Gpaste can do it. The out of the box experience is a bit hit and miss, but it’s plenty configurable and reliable once set up to your liking.
Bugs? No, works as intended. But you might want to consider a clipboard manager instead, so that you can sync the clipboard to the selection buffer and vice versa.
Up until last year I would have said Ubuntu. It was qualitatively the best desktop choice when I started with it in the aughts, and is still one of the few distros that has a reasonable out of the box install option with LVM. But I recently tried a Silverblue variant and NixOS, and I like what I see. Once I’m comfortable enough I will switch, I’m tired of the ensnapification and the Pro nag screens.
The biggest downside is that it’s only for distributing applications with a graphical user interface. Command line utilities still need another method of distribution.
As in you are seeing multiple boot entries? It’s likely one entry per kernel version that you have installed. It doesn’t happen often these days any more, but in some situations it’s handy to be able to revert to a previous kernel if for example third party modules break.