To be fair that was also my experience with PopOS which is designed to be user-friendly. The answer to questions like 'how do I take a screenshot of a region and copy it to clipboard without spamming files' or 'how do I switch audio devices between speakers and headset' just tends to be 'run this long-ass command you would never have figured out on your own' or 'Write a shell script full of such commands to do it for you and call it with a shortcut key'. I think this is a linux problem, not a distro problem, because it was the same way when I was using redhat 15 years ago or slackware 30 years ago.
Yeah, that worked for copyign stuff over, but I need some kind of cloud backup service that I can drop files like my passwrods.kdbx file or my writing projects on to ensure that they are backed up. I have since discovered pCloud and have been very happy with it so far.
I hate the 'containerize everything' methodology of Bazzite. I tried it, and every problem I ran into the solution was like 'Oh, go add this line to the config file in this folder, easy peasy', only nothing was where it should've been because everything was containerized. I get that it's useful, but it's not my jam. I like nobara a lot better (because it's a regular distro, but also because it's not-ubuntu which hates my bog-standard RTX3060 GPU for, uh, reasons; Pop wouldn't let me update the nvidia driver without hard-locking the system no matter the version I tried, 2 installs of Ubuntu simply turned my monitor off with 'no signal' on boot and refused to do anything even when I let them sit there for 30 minutes, and Mint did the same thing booting the installer on USB.
However, I've since discovered pCloud and begun migrating my onedrive stuff over there. I was only ever using onedrive because it came installed with windows and I needed a place to put little stuff like my keepass passwords database and small projects and such to ensure that they were backed up. I would much rather use something with a linux-native client and without all the fucky-wuckiness that tends to be involved in any Microsoft product.
Reagan was in the 80s, but yeah, 100% agree. But I mean someone was going to fuck it up sooner or later, cause this country has always been by, for, and about the rich, and it was pretty clear the rich weren't very happy about how hard it was to get even richer back then.
No doubt, but it's still a lot better than doing the annuity. Half of fuck you money is still fuck you money.
I agree with all of that except the end: it's definitely still greed, it's just become easier to other your fellow man so you don't even have to hate him, you can at best briefly consider his existence as you pave over him on your way to whatever absolute moral certitude you're pursuing. That's the true banality of evil: greed makes dehumanization so commonplace that advocating for awful shit to be done to your fellow human being isn't even widely seen as evil anymore.
Oh I know, but it used to be at least - on the small scale - somewhat mitigated by the fact that most people were basically decent and not trying to fuck everyone else over. I remember as a young child in the 70s that my mother shopped at a grocery store that wasn't much bigger than my house is today, a little mom and pop operation that had been open for 40 years and run by an old guy, his wife, and a couple of their kids. They knew every customer who came in, knew each others' families, and were actual acquaintances or even friends instead of merely friendly with them. Nowadays I couldn't even tell you how to go about finding a grocery store that isn't the size of my neighborhood and owned by one of maybe 5 companies. Monopolies certainly existed before, but I dunno if it was people, regulations, or what, but there was a while, when I was a kid, that at least the ground-level experience of it wasn't nearly as bad as it is now.
I mean we keep signing up for services because they're convenient or fun or interesting and every single time they start cutting corners, worsening services, being more invasive with ads, and charging more and more for the 'privilege' of doing whatever it was you were doing there. Why do we keep falling for that and then being surprised when it ends up in the same place as the last 12 platforms or whatever?
You liked him as Shane? I really disliked him in that role, dunno what it was.
As someone who used to have a bad case of wanderlust for the same reasons, let me just say: the place where you belong is not a place out in the world that you find, it's a place that you make inside of yourself from your satisfaction with your life, your connections to others, etc. What you seek can be found anywhere, but nowhere will make you happy until you do. Travel is a heck of an adventure and I have a lot of great stories from that time so I'm not saying don't travel. Just don't expect to find what you're looking for wherever you go or you'll never be satisfied with the experience in itself.