

The hardest person to convert is a “power user”. I guess you should let Red Hat and SUSE know their main product is a project. Oh and Google, Facebook, Amazon, etc…
The hardest person to convert is a “power user”. I guess you should let Red Hat and SUSE know their main product is a project. Oh and Google, Facebook, Amazon, etc…
Thanks for proving my point.
I again think you mean blockchain.
In technologies around crypto, not in crypto. Crypto exchanges like Coinbase that maintained some ethical standards did just fine.
Every “crash” is usually still higher than the previous high. That is if you ignore all the shit coins out there.
They seem to be conflating crypto currencies with the blockchain technology that enables crypto currencies. If the original meme uses NFTs, it would be accurate.
Replace crypto with nft and I would agree there was a bubble. But crypto is not nfts. Crypto is short for crypto currency, such as btc and eth. I’m not moving the goalposts, you did by lumping in all of blockchain. You seem to agree that I was right.
As long as you jump out before the burst, you’re doing great.
I have no argument with that. That’s definitely how btc is used.
Where was the bubble for btc?
Ah, in that case I’m on board. That was obviously a bubble.
Crypto bubble? BTC is near its all time high that was last month… People tend to really over exaggerate how hard the prominent crypto currencies crash.
Edit: People seem to not understand that crypto is short hand for crypto currency, not all of everything ever made with blockchain. Swap crypto with NFTs and the meme makes sense.
Mine has been running for years now without any such deletions.
Oracle Cloud will give you far more for free.
Fedora Core hasn’t been a thing in decades, it’s just Fedora or the Fedora Project now. CentOS Stream is ABI compatible with RHEL If you create a free Red Hat Developer account you can get 16 free RHEL licenses. So, yes you very much can run RHEL.
Edit: If you or anyone else is interested https://developers.redhat.com/articles/faqs-no-cost-red-hat-enterprise-linux