

BASIC. Get a C64 emulator and some old kids books that have examples. Watch them go wild just writing "10 PRINT ‘{sibling_name} SUCKS’ / 20 GOTO 10 "


BASIC. Get a C64 emulator and some old kids books that have examples. Watch them go wild just writing "10 PRINT ‘{sibling_name} SUCKS’ / 20 GOTO 10 "


I’m saying KIDS do. Especially younger kids. Clearly started in my original comment.


Literally nothing I said in my comment is related to anything you e said here.
I don’t get where this is coming from.


It is very much subjective. Are you serious?
If you grew up with keyboards and mice, that has all been removed as a barrier to interaction with computers.
You’re insane if you think your old way of doing things is somehow “better” or meaningful.
I bet you’re also trying to force your kids to listen to YOUR music and tell them why it’s better then their choices, right??
Grow up.


Linux is literally in every device in your home. Doesn’t mean you’re kids need to engage with it.


You aren’t your children though. They experience better technology literally all the time.


6 years old is a bit young because at that age, they need a reason to engage with anything.
Games might be a place to start, but a kid will think “tablet is easier”. Same with music or videos.
Art is another place to start, but even then, why computers?
You need to wait until they have an idea or goal they want to accomplish, then maybe use it as an illustrative tool. In most cases for kids though, a PC is unnecessary with phones and tablets being so prevalent with an easier to grasp UI/UX.


Can you clarify the WHAT here? What is in /docker, your volume mounts, or your layers and internals?
Also, how are you running it? Local process, or in a container itself?


Install pavucontrol and that will give you a somewhat easier way to play with profiles for audio devices. Check the configuration of your headset, and try flipping it through different modes to see if one works best for you.


Haven’t been hearing much about Cosmic after the first releases. Anyone using it?


It’s an environment variable…
Does this warrant and entire novel about it if you’re working within external source builds? No.
In fact, I think you’d be better off writing a deep dive into what/how environment variables work at build time, and also invoking commands on the CLI.
Just convenience. That’s what packages provide. There’s no special magic under the hood in most cases as a downside to packages, and in most cases for specific projects, this is why stacks have containers, because you set the build steps to include the things you need in a pragmatic way, but now have to mess with static files on a filesystem.
I think you were told MANY times in the last thread…that’s not all Clevis is used for. You misunderstood the tool.


Try disabling hardware acceleration on whatever browser she’s using, or switch to using a different YT frontend: https://github.com/mendel5/alternative-front-ends?tab=readme-ov-file#youtube


If you’re this familiar with all the moving bits of this, why are you asking?
I’m only saying this because this is obviously someone who read a bunch of stuff about various things that are beyond their technical expertise but have no idea why they would even need such a stack.
Kind of a crazy thing to ask about here.


If you’re running the exact same version, just do an apt update and then see if upgrade packages show up.
Are you running Gnome?