How can I rob back what was stolen from me without involving my family?
]]>The most important one is the professional file manager with its rich, scriptable command set. It integrates file viewers for most of the common file types, as well as an audio/video player. Furthermore, the virtual cosmos contains a chess game, a netwalk game, a 3D mines game, a multi-function clock, a stock watchlist, some fractals, and a Linux kernel configurator in form of a kernel patch.
An autoplay function allows to show or play things one ofter the other (e.g. slideshow of picture files or document pages, playing of multiple audio or video files).
The core of Eagle Mode supports fast anti-aliased graphics, virtually unlimited depth of zooming, extensive mouse and keyboard control, animated navigation with kinetic effects (inertia, friction, and magnetism), popup-zoomed control views, editable bookmarks, in-place help texts, and working with multiple windows.
Eagle Mode is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
You never had seen your HD before like this way
Video demo (it's from the first version, but demostrate well how it works)
]]>Right now I only have 1 thing running on it, a Project Zomboid server.
Things I know I want to do with it already:
I don't know any other useful things to try to run. Any ideas?
]]>Now which term you think is better and which one should be used. I hear arguments that using free software instead of open source confuses people. But I think that it actually lies them and disinforms them about the true reasons why free software was created in the first place.
What are you thoughts on this ?
]]>CLAs make you hand over your ownership of the code so they can do whatever they want with it. This is how projects like Terraform and MongoDB went proprietary over night, despite containing volunteered code under copyleft licences.
So while Element is trying to spin the switch to AGPL as being good for freedom or whatever, they plainly state their intention to profit from volunteered code. This could mean making special arrangement for some companies to receive the code without AGPL terms, or just outright changing the licence for the entire project at a later point.
Personally, I think volunteering under a CLA is tantamount to being an unpaid employee, and that the best thing to do from here on would be to make forks of those projects containing AGPL contributions that Element doesn't hold ownership over. Or just work on something else, because Matrix and its ecosystem are frankly just awful.
]]>But the best part about it is it contributes data to the OpenStreetMap project. I know people who say they don't use any Google services except for Google Maps. I think projects like this are important so that alternatives can be created.
By the way, I'm not affiliated with this project in any way. I'm not even a programmer. I heard about it through the grapevine, and I'm genuinely excited about this! It's really fun!
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