Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Computer Networks, 3rd ed., p. 83.
Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Computer Networks, 3rd ed., p. 83.
Yeah, the author normally rarely misses an opportunity to complain about KDE being too complex in his articles - and COSMIC aims to fall in that sweet spot between the extremes that are GNOME and KDE, while adding features like optional but native tiling.
The applet concept where applets live in their own process and communicate via Wayland protocols (behind a COSMIC API) is also less likely to break than GNOME plugins that are horribly injected into its bowels.
Given the toolkit, organized development and UX decisions being up-front designed with figma sketches, etc. that are reviewed before implemented, and having both paid developers and community contributors it has a lot of potential.
Yeah Denmark is very relaxed about bodies and public nudity in general. Denmark was the world’s first country (in the modern world) to legalize porn. However, consent matters and consenting to one type of exposure doesn’t mean consenting to everything.
I installed it on my gaming laptop. The OS is solid, probably one of the best distros for laptops out-of-the-box and COSMIC is pretty good but have some rough edges like problems with tray icons and games, so I also did a quick “apt install gnome-session”. I’ll switch over to Plasma 6 in a little while when it’s ready, never was a GNOME fan but it’s ok for a couple of months.
When playing with COSMIC I use Nautilus as COSMIC Files is still missing features like adding smb shares and file compress/extract. I’ll probably be able to use the DE full time later this year.
They also have port forwarding without static IP, but you have to renew the port every 7 days. Which is what I use, I don’t mind changing port once a week.
Somewhere, I think it was here Carl mentions it might be early next year as he doesn’t want to pressure devs over Christmas.
I think they’ll release an Alpha update monthly until Beta.