Firmware update, means the printers keep working with third party ink (HP loses). Bricking them, means you must buy another printer (HP has a 50:50 chance to win).
AC is great, but have you ever had DC?
But there are things with which I'm dissatisfied lol I guess the world may never know
Think of the shareholders!
PET technologies = Privacy Enhancing Technologies technologies
I fixed the bulleted.
-
Home routing and encryption technologies are making ~~lawful interception~~ spying on innocent civilians harder for Europol
-
PET-enabled home routing allows for secure communication, ~~hindering~~ preventing law enforcement’s ability to intercept and ~~monitor~~ spy on the communications of innocent civilians
-
Europol suggests solutions such as disabling PET technologies and implementing cross-border interception standards to address the issue of Europol not knowing how to do their jobs without resorting to Orwellian dystopian techniques
-
PET technologies does exactly what it's intended to do--protect the innocent civilian from the prying eyes of the not innocent bodies that are hellbent on eroding privacy and security
The Matrix deals with the exact question.
I missed that link thanks! I signed up to be notified when it opens. You're absolutely right. It would be fun. Super nice design!
That's not great, but that's REALLY not bad! As in, totally reasonable for this board! Are you planning on making a whole bunch and selling them?
Right, but Fedora failures allows me still to boot. Windows failures forces an uninstallation of the update, killing even more time. There are good and bad things to each approach.
I pretty much always recommend Linux Mint Cinnamon for anyone entering Linux for the first time or anyone who wants something to just work 98% of the time. I use Mint Debian Edition (testing it out. So far, so good, and it's quickly entering first place in terms of recommendations, as it seems just as stable and uses Debian packages instead of Ubuntu's), OpenSuse with KDE (less for beginner's and more for those who want "eye candy" and some nostalgia), and Fedora Silverblue (currently have an update issue with its certificates, so can't really recommend it yet). I've found very few Windows programs to not work within WINE (more complex, system file dependent programs generally are those that fail), so you may find that all of your Windows-only programs work perfectly fine under WINE.
With Mint (and others, I'm sure), you can install multiple DEs and test them out, then remove those you don't like. Or keep them all and play DE roulette I guess lol
You understood! Hahahaha!!