That, right there, is something that’s said right before someone learns the definition of “defenestration” the hard way
That, right there, is something that’s said right before someone learns the definition of “defenestration” the hard way
That means he fired himself too, right?
… Right?
Thanks, I’ll check that out!
I wasn’t asking about a Linux client for Teams, I was asking about an open source alternative to Teams
Are there some open source Teams alternatives you’d recommend?
“You’re absolutely right, we wouldn’t want to take too long to break the network or open god rights vulnerabilities”
So, basically, just like Windows? Sounds like they’re succeeding then
I love that mentality to development
If it has a buffer overflow exploit that caused it to execute arbitrary code is his response that people shouldn’t be sending that much data into that port anyway so we’re not going to fix it?
(I feel like this shouldn’t require a /s but I’m throwing it in anyway)
If you have Ubuntu installed in the room, then yes
You’d think with all those penguins…
That’s a great feature, actually, it saves you from using Windows
Perhaps because Steam is the launcher we actually choose to use? That does make a big difference…
Yes, the launcher I use for almost all my games which gives me a single interface to install, update, and run them. It has purpose. It’s the launcher I’m actually intending to use.
Eats Ass games (as one example) loading up their own launcher in the middle of that and providing no actual benefit other than wasting my time and resources is NOT something I choose to use.
Whichever one is primary or third party, I don’t really care about the semantics of it, but the extra launcher that isn’t needed or wanted is what I think of when someone’s talking about third party launchers.
I dunno, I tend to think of the useless thing that comes up for a game I bought on Steam and run through Steam to be “third party”… Maybe that’s a stretch, but whatever, it’s just unwanted and unnecessary at that point
Microsoft switching their Azure stack Linux build to their own Azure Linux distro, to me, is less surprising than them not already using it… When they first announced CBL Mariner (the predecessor of Azure Linux), I thought that’s what they were already running.
If I’m putting BSD or MIT license on something, I’m explicitly saying you can use it however you want, you can change it however you want, you don’t have to share back, I just ask for credit for my part in it
It’s not taking so much as being given freely
Ooh, that actually doesn’t sound bad… Slightly tart sweet with the salty tang of the sauce, maybe with a kick of spice from jalapenos… I’ll have to give that a try sometime
ETA: I missed that it said “pasta” rather than “pizza”, but my comment stands