@FredOverflow It used to be the case that you ended up with problems due having 64-bit linux and needing 32-bit flash. Many linux distros build their browsers as 64-bit. It's less of a problem these days and if you don't need flash, well, even better.
@FredOverflow I'm running 64-bit fedora right now, with flash 64-bit :) So not really. As @CatPlusPlus says, most of the repository stuff will target 64-bit.
@CatPlusPlus It was reported as a symptom before. You could have had a network glitch or just a bug in the javascript. If it breaks the state of the page, we have "soft-UB" in the browser :)
@CatPlusPlus I didn't say that (though I'm pretty sure I ran into those). It's just that VLC is more 'click+forget' (just works). E.g. mplayer frequently won't DWIM
VLC can just handle a raw ISO, a UDF mounted directory without any further instruction, whereas with mplayer you have to (sometimes) tell it 'the protocol' to use to open a URI
generally i find vlc knows more formats and deals better with slightly corrupted files than either mplayer or winamp, but it has braindead user interface
@FredOverflow I'm probably not the person to ask as I've only been using using linux for a few months, but I found Arch to be wonderful. Linux Mint looks good too.
hi guys, I've been using windows for all my life, and I want to switch to Linux. for pentesting and for programming in c++. what is the distrubition that you suggest to start with . Thanks
@FredOverflow I think you mean that gentoo behaves as a 'developer box' at all times. It thinks you want to tweak the package + compilation system all the friggin time. It does rock with that, but I prefer an 'honest'/'straightforward' distro, where you can just add your own stuff as desired
@Pubby Not anymore. ebuilds/binary packages to the rescue. Still, it is more labour intensive than other (binary) distros, and you get the same power on Debian anyway
@CatPlusPlus Yeah I saw they switched to 'recommending' stage-3 installs. Kind of takes the point out of the idea of compiling your own distribution for me
@CatPlusPlus Now, you do the timings and then report back. That is just plainly false. I have a fast system (always have had) and I can testify it is not a negligable delay
@AbdessamadBond it would be a shame if you thought that Linux still isn't ready for the desktop, only because Canonical made a mess of Ubuntu's desktop environment
Gnome -> for the masses (in general, simpler than windows, less styled than MacOS) KDE -> for the tweakers and the lovers of Windowsy crowded interfaces XFce -> Lean an mean devs (you love the command line too)
@FredOverflow In general, it doesn't matter. A few packages make assumptions about your desktop environment (which will usually only result in lessened integration or delays in launching)
@CatPlusPlus I have tried them (on windows even). Ratpoison did strike a chord, but in my experience too many applications just don't 'work well enough' with them. Think VirtualBox, or even browsers.
@StackedCrooked Would that work? Seriously, kind of hard to respond to messages scrolled offscreen. And it's not pretty :)
@Xeo Right you posted this before while I was busy at work and I was planning to watch it later, but I realized at the same time that I would probably forget about it. Thanks for posting it again.
Overkill is the use of excessive force or action that goes further than is necessary to achieve its goal. It implies that, while the goal was accomplished, there was collateral damage as a result.
Nuclear weapons
Overkill is especially used to refer to a destructive nuclear capacity exceeding the amount needed to destroy an enemy
The term is attested from 1946 and was in common use during the Cold War era, referring to the arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union. Both nations possessed (US and Russia still possess) more than enough nuclear weapons to destroy one anothe...