Yup. That's the way the Ohio 'non-gerrymandering' law was written. Just drag your feet long enough, and it goes back to the (Republican-leaning) legislature. And then just drag their feet long enough, and those maps get used regardless of legality (they were ruled illegal... 2, 3x over by the state Supreme Court, but no matter!)
taj
Yup. Nearly everyone runs Linux. They just don't know it.
I still can't figure out what they're actually doing. My husband was worried that he wasn't going to be able to watch at work. But, so far that hasn't proved to be true. So... Yeah. Idk. We're keeping it for now, and as long as he/we can continue to watch both at home and at work. And, bonus points if my dad can watch at his second house in Asheville (he lives with us half time and there half time, we split sharing of various streaming services...)
This has been/is my experience over the last 5-10+ years. When I think about how far we've come since the early to mid 2000s... Man. My mind boggles. I still run Ubuntu on my server, for simplicity sake, but have become a fan of tumbleweed for my personal machine.
I'm a long time Gnome user myself, and man has Wayland come a long ways. I can't even imagine going back to X11. The last time I booted into a session to check if it would "fix" somet, I was immediately blown away by just how choppy and awful it is. Once you get used to Wayland X11 is just... Bad.
It's taken me a bit to get used to and get it setup, but I'm liking it more and more, the longer I'm on it :)
Lolol it should!
I think I saw some were going dark at like 7am this morning, so it may just not have happened yet.
I have openSuse Tumbleweed on my desktop and Ubuntu 22.04 on a laptop which I use as a server... But which has become my temporary, primary machine, as my desktop is down with a dead psu ATM...
Idk that we'll ever get the old days back. But Lemmy is maybe a step in the right direction at least.
It can only improve from here.
I've been coughing a lot, while working outside the last few days. I'm in Ohio, and it doesn't look particularly dusty or smoky, but my lungs can sure feel it.
Yup. That's the way the Ohio 'non-gerrymandering' law was written. Just drag your feet long enough, and it goes back to the (Republican-leaning) legislature. And then just drag their feet long enough, and those maps get used regardless of legality (they were ruled illegal... 2, 3x over by the state Supreme Court, but no matter!)