I’m using my old netbook as Pi-hole and some home server stuff. Does its job.
I’m using my old netbook as Pi-hole and some home server stuff. Does its job.
To be fair, I imagine an entire browser just like that for a long time. You have your settings and every website would look the same. A default frontend for everything. No Javascript, just the content.
Reader mode is really useful and I use it daily basis. It removes all the clutter and leaves just the important part.
It wouldn’t be worse than snap integration which Mint already doesn’t use. Also Mint have a backup plan called LMDE if things go sour.
Basically like that but Frankenstein saying it.
Depends on what you need actually. I was doing fine with urxvt on Xorg, so foot is a perfect alternative for me on Wayland.
Jevons didn’t know that autonomous vehicles can work like a hive mind, today it’s possible.
Not exactly moneyless but imagine quality of life improvements for Stardew Valley. That’s “Fields of Mistria”.
That’s a good analogy.
It doesn’t use Visual Basic for its macros so I wouldn’t expect a complex compatibility. To be fair Excel macros is usually a problem outside of MS Office.
It’s not open source but probably has the best compatibility. You can give it a shot.
https://www.freeoffice.com/en/
Needs an account after one week though.
Just use 2 PB Google Drive as swap.
Not Linux but Haiku would run on it I think.
As a calligrapher, this is not pleasing to look at. Far from it.
I assume you’ve never used Linux long enough to get a grip. You would get there if you use it long enough.
However, operating systems are just tools. Use which one is easy for you. If you have no spare time to learn a new OS, just use what you know. Though Microsoft’s latest shenanigans really force some people to switch to other OSes.
No problem! Voice Attack was a good addition to ED but you’ll get used to it I guess. :)
I just hope they won’t ruin it with MTX.
Not sure about EDMC but Voice Attack won’t (and can’t) run on Linux since it runs on Windows’ own voice recognition system.
I think I used to do that with wicd.
While this is true for my another older netbook (40 W), my netbook’s power consumption for running Pi-hole is ~15 W. I think it’s acceptable for such operation. 5 W is tempting though.