If they’re 4 years old, that makes them generation alpha.
Kubuntu, because it’s the most solid distro I’ve used that meets my needs.
It may surprise you to see how many Debian contributors are doing so on Canonical’s payroll.
Isn’t Pop OS just System76’s spin on Ubuntu?
I switched pharmacies and holy shit do the different Adderall generics taste different. I’m stuck now with the Meijer pharmacy because I can’t go back to the bitter vomit-inducing crap I was getting at Rite Aid.
The memory isn’t really doable with this SOC, but the storage is just an SD card slot on the motherboard. (I saw this and spoke to the CEO at this year’s Ubuntu Summit.)
I started on 24.04, but I updated to 24.10 to get Plasma 6. I quite like snaps (enough so that I publish the snaps of several tools)
That leopard is so overfed it needed to grow additional toes just to cope!
I believe the two requirements for level 2 are 200 VAC and 2 kW. A 208V 30A oven outlet in a typical American apartment is level 2, but so is a 240V, 15 A plug in a typical European, well, any room.
The 240V, 30A+ portable EVSEs many cars come with are level 2, though they are often also able to do level 1 charging if they work on 120V outlets.
That’s a very “we’ll fix it in software!” solution
I’m very happily using Kubuntu on mine.
Many cars with CCS type 1 will lock a J1772 the same way they lock the type 1 port. Sad the Volt doesn’t.
In much of the world the wall plug is the bottom end of level 2.
Why? It works with both Ubuntu and Fedora, so making images of other distros should be pretty straightforward.
They don’t really compete. Dark table does image processing, whereas Digikam’s major strength is its library organization.
In Python it’s really hard!
def __eq__(self, other):
...
How do you even write those subscripted hyphens???
That link includes a whole lot of old things as well as blog posts about how they sped up the performance of the Firefox snap, after which there doesn’t seem to be much, if any, further evidence of the snap being slow.
The claim that snaps are a Canonical NIH thing is falsified by those two facts. Even if Canonical said “okay, we’ll distribute desktop apps with Flatpak,” that wouldn’t affect the vast majority of their ongoing effort for snaps, which are related to things that Flatpak simply doesn’t do. Instead, they’d have the separate work of making the moving target of flatpaks work with their snap-based systems such as Ubuntu Core while still having to fully maintain that snap based ecosystem for the enterprise customers who use it for things that Flatpak simply doesn’t do.
Building a new OS isn’t going to make RISC-V boards faster. The primary limiting factor here is the actual hardware.