I doubt that ICANN will add .smash as a TLD anytime soon, lol. You might have misinterpreted my previous remark.
Peter1986C
Formerly on lemmings.world (Lemmy) as Peter1986C.
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Peter1986C@piefed.europe.pubto
pics@lemmy.world•Helpful salamander redirects drainpipe opening away from the Binnendieze canal. Netherlands. Sculpture by Joris Baudoin.English
3·26 days agoThe angle in this photo is indeed odd, but also the only time I ever taken a boat on the Binnendieze was in a fairly small boat with only a few other tourists and a guide. I might misremember, because it has been a few years, but there were some moments we had to mind our heads.
Ha, that old meme.
For those who need their memories refreshed: https://youtu.be/-TcLxlkc2pA
There is no .smash TLD (yet). Sorry to disappoint you.
Peter1986C@piefed.europe.pubto
Linux@programming.dev•Unexpected Surprise: Windows 11 Outperforming Linux On An Intel Arrow Lake H LaptopEnglish
1·2 months agoIt has been a while that I used it, but Manjaro is Arch Linux with access to the AUR enabled by default. So it is very rolling and given the malware that has been found in the AUR more than once in 2025, I am not sure how much I would recommend Manjaro.
Myself, I am on Solus KDE (rolling, but not to the extend that Arch (derivatives) are) right now and that is pretty solid. Its disadvantage over Fedora is that you have to set up a firewall yourself, as well as the fact there is a slightly larger reliance on system packages (Flathub is still accessible from Discover).
Peter1986C@piefed.europe.pubto
Linux@programming.dev•Unexpected Surprise: Windows 11 Outperforming Linux On An Intel Arrow Lake H LaptopEnglish
1·2 months agoYou are correct on Fedora not being rolling. My mistake. If you are fine with not having (as many) native installs you should be fine with Fedora.
Peter1986C@piefed.europe.pubto
Linux@programming.dev•Unexpected Surprise: Windows 11 Outperforming Linux On An Intel Arrow Lake H LaptopEnglish
1·2 months agoIf you migrate to Fedora KDE, just remind yourself to set the checking for updates on a weekly or monthly basis to mitigate the “updates a lot” con of a rolling release. This is done in the settings app that KDE ships.
Mind you, Fedora spins with a desktop (in contrast to their server variants) primarily use Flatpaks now (either from them, from Flathub or both) so you may wish to consider whether you would mind that.
I switched to it (KDE version) earlier this year (away from Fedora) and apart from a few minor things (e.g. there was no firewall, so I installed firewalld) it has been running pretty well.


Somebody dropped litter.
Let’s see if any of you spotted the plastic bottle.