Quite pricey, though. And the maids are a bit clingy.
laughterlaughter
I hate Amazon, but c'mon.
This is very specific to your industry. Community Colleges are great for a lot of people.
What you're saying does not apply to Community Colleges only. It could apply to Universities with Computer Science departments. Granted, you'd learn more than 0 things in Universities; but for most of the stuff that's required in tech companies, yup, you could learn them for free online, given enough determination.
Ok, Sarah Palin.
I have so much to learn. Last time I was tracking distros and having fun with distro hopping was with Slackware 7, I think.
What is ostree? What is bazzite? Time to google stuff.
They kinda were for me. But then, I was young with plenty of time to spend.
So, this is only available for Fedora users?
What does rebasing mean in this context? I try to google it, but all I get is git rebase.
Any articles about it that are worth reading? Or if you can explain, that would be neat. Thanks!
1 hour video? Ain't nobody got time for that.
Summarized by AI (ugh):
The "Shipbreakers" YouTube video explores the issue of toxic ships being illegally exported to developing countries for breaking, with a focus on the notorious case of the Norwegian ship, the Tulip. Despite being on Greenpeace's most toxic list, the ship flies a bogus flag and its first-world owners deny responsibility. Marietta, a character in the video, expresses concern over the double standard of Western countries exporting their toxic waste while refusing to accept it in their own. The video also features Mittu, a shipbreaker who expresses his longing to travel but finds contentment in the present as he watches ships come to be broken down for survival. The scene is accompanied by upbeat singing, highlighting the contrasting emotions of destruction and contentment. The video also shows the dangerous and labor-intensive process of dismantling old ships for scrap, with workers risking accidents and injury to extract valuable resources from the obsolete vessels.
But did he have millions in his bank accounts or not? He had a damn butler and took a Russian ballet crew on a sailing trip!
If he went into the world "with no money," it was still his choice. At any point he could have said "you know what, fuck this, I'm coming back to my mansion." Not everyone has that luxury.
Comfort for both the reclinee and the person behind don't have to be mutually exclusive.