

Thanks for sharing this, it actually looks like a fantastic alternative to Adobe Acrobat DC.
Thanks for sharing this, it actually looks like a fantastic alternative to Adobe Acrobat DC.
Take a look at Minifree Ltd. For less than USD $500, you can get a decent ThinkPad with Libreboot and your choice of Linux distro (KDE Debian is installed by default).
Near me is a dive bar on the river called Kuchie’s on the Water and it’s home to some of the most disgusting “food” you’ve ever seen.
I’m pretty sure this is a reference to Austin Powers, where he’s giving the Irish hitman a swirly in a casino bathroom and yelling “WHO DOES NUMBER 2 WORK FOR” while a gambler played by Tom Arnold in the next stall is trying to encourage him on.
That’s right, show that turd who’s boss!
No kidding. I’ve tried to use Peer Tube but it was absurdly confusing.
Yes, you’ll notice a few snap packages. This is because Authy is distributed on Linux as a snap.
Yep, using conky-grapes.
Fedora does the same thing where you can choose between RPM or Flatpak. The only flatpak package I’ve ever had problems with was OnlyOffice, and the issue was that the scaling was blown way out of proportions. Switching to the RPM version resolved that.
Right? I mean what other chocolate sandwich cookie is “overflowing with nut”?
You literally can’t go wrong with a Brother b&w laser printer.
Check out Minifree Ltd. They refurbish old Thinkpads, replace the bootloader with libreboot, and come with encrypted Debian KDE. They offer either the T440p or the X230, and you can choose different SSD and RAM configurations. Prices are as low as £258.00 for the X230 with 16GB of RAM and a 480 GB SSD.
For basic form filling, the Firefox PDF editor is fine. But sounds like OP’s use case is more advanced than that.