Still useful just in case some client is weird
Always knew xkcd is a bro
Fair!
But still, an installation process that doesn't involve a package manager is a bit of a pain, comparatively. Flatpaks may certainly be very helpful, though.
While I appreciate seeing content in Russian, this would better be placed in another community
Круто и внезапно здесь видеть контент на русском, но, мне кажется, это надо двинуть в другое сообщество
But that's an entirely different story
Because normally it is about "living happy ever after"
We may not really know what to do afterwards.
Bitcoin will not go to 0, unless a critical bug is found to allow double spending.
It has utility that more and more people turn to, and at the same time it has a strictly limited supply.
It will absolutely dip in value once yet another wave is over (quite shortly), but it will not drop to 0 or go away.
Still, any funds reliant on Bitcoin will take a hit in the meanwhile.
I can absolutely imagine Amazon itself getting to sell those
Maybe an infrared heater somewhere? They can look like a painting or whatnot, while actually serving as a heater first and foremost.
Actually yes, because "warm air" and "warm solid surface" are at two different temperatures to us due to unequal heat transfer.
The walls just have to be slightly above the air temperature to heat it up, and they may feel a bit cold anyway.
I can absolutely expect Slackware to be solid; my concern is about user-friendliness :D
Not the easiest distro out there.
On the topic of immutable distros, I more or less understood them and kind of managed to work fine with them, but, honestly, I feel all they do is enforce a certain way to interact with the system that makes screwing it up very hard - but on the other hand, introduces a slew of non-standard and sometimes complicated solutions newbies won't understand (even for veterans it takes a while to get a grasp on them). If you follow the same pipeline on a mutable distro, you get the same stability plus the ability to do a lot of things without jumping through the hoops.
Right now I ended up on classical non-atomic Fedora for this reason. It features a lot of safe practices from immutable distros - system snapshots before updating, prioritizing flatpaks, container-oriented terminal able to work with Distrobox among all other things - but at the same time it's a mutable distro able to work with everything else.
But what if you still have file, but lose the signature?