Admin of lemmy.blahaj.zone
I can also be found on the microblog fediverse at @ada@blahaj.zone or on matrix at @ada:chat.blahaj.zone
CachyOS. I use it because I am a fan of Arch based systems, rolling releases etc, but CachyOS is optimised for my generation of hardware, and has lots of good default configurations for various apps. They have a customised proton version, a good default fish profile etc.
tl;dr It’s Arch, but optimised, and slightly more pre-configured out of the box.
Because it pretends to be different to the centralised corporate social media platforms, whilst giving the cohesive experience of a centralised platform
I’m so excited about Cosmic! Bring it on
Plasma, but I’ll be moving to cosmic as soon as it enables auto power off of monitors on idle
Imagine my surprise when “What could Hamas do to end the violence” wasn’t just an innocent question…
Australian/British slang. It’s a disparaging term for Americans
Starts with rhyming slang
American = Yank Yank = Tank Tank = Septic Tank Septic Tank = Seppo
As I said, yes, a lemmy that bans folk like you is a lemmy that is doing something right
“What could Hamas do to end the violence?”
Nothing else.
And I got immediately banned.
Making excuses for genocide being something that gets you banned is a lemmy I’m fine with
Seppo is a really unfortunate name…
It’s both. They’re the same trains in Sydney. It’s mostly an overground network with several underground parts in the city centre
There are double decker subway trains in Sydney, Australia
I have many issues with hexbear, but transphobia is not one of them. They are explicitly and aggressively trans inclusive
I was responding to someone who saw no need for Wayland to exist, not advocating for everyone to use it
but it works
For some definitions of “works”
Our biggest cities normally have bus and train. About half of them have some sort of light rail/tram equivalent too. The coverage isn’t completely comprehensive, so it’s possible to find suburbs that don’t have great coverage, but by and large, it’s pretty good. Footpaths and bicycle paths are common too. The cycling infrastructure is often gappy, so you on commutes etc, you can find yourself navigating spaces without dedicated cycling infrastructure, but generally, you can get a good portion of a cycle commute on dedicated bike spaces. The only roads without a pedestrian corridor of some sort are generally major highways
In our smaller and medium cities, the trains are normally inter city, not local, so they’re not so much use as public transport, but there are generally buses, though with less coverage. Good pedestrian infrastructure even in smaller cities though. It’s harder to survive in smaller cities without a car, but possible.
Once you get out of smaller cities and in to towns and villages though, it gets harder again.
Australian manages pretty good urban public transport, with a much lower density than the US
(Our rural public transport effectively doesn’t exist though)
“Are cars always this awful” you ask, whilst shitting on the alternative…
Looks more like a timber wolf to me
It’s spam