Could be. Unfortunately, the folks who found this don’t really go into enough detail about the attack’s initial entry point.
Could be. Unfortunately, the folks who found this don’t really go into enough detail about the attack’s initial entry point.
Too late, in my case. Already got Bazzite running full time on a laptop! rpm-ostree
and package layering are definitely a different way to think about things, but it’s nice having a system that’s kind of unbreakable.
I agree, though, that jumping into immutable distros shouldn’t be a glib decision for newcomers, though Aurora might be a good option for anyone that just wants to set it and forget it.
There have been major strides to make first time setups stupid-proof in a lot of distros, to the point that I think we’re seeing the beginnings of a demographic shift.
And like in your dad’s case, sometimes browsing the internet, getting on Zoom, and printing some files are all people really want.
PopOS is one I’m going to be looking at today, along with Aurora!
I mentioned to someone else that I practiced installing Arch in a VM, and while I got everything working, it wasn’t what I would consider a fun experience (and I’m not implying that nobody would find it fun). Just a level of system admin I’m not that interested in taking up. 😅
But that’s good advice to just take the plunge. Most of my important info is already backed up, so making sure my WFH software stack is ready is probably the final significant hurdle.
Best info I could find is from a previous blog post two links beyond the original article. “This updated version of malware delivered via JavaScript comes in archive files as attachments in emails.”
So, don’t open any weird attachments…? That’s what I’m getting from it.
TBH, it would be really funny and poetic to coopt the phrase “drill baby, drill” to mean something completely different. I hope the Internet makes that happen.
Good. End-stage-capitalism isn’t working for most people, and it’s time these polluters pay what they owe humanity.
If that means they’re sued into bankruptcy, well, then they should have better estimated the “cost of doing business,” hadn’t they have?
That particular Edimax dongle I mentioned was sold as an 802.11ac option for Raspberry Pi’s. I didn’t know at the time that it was a unique case, so even the best of intentions can still sometimes wind up biting you. I would have bought something else, had I known!
At least you can find the package module in most community repositories, now.
Thank you for the history lesson! I can see why their decision might chafe some people or cause them to be a bit more wary (given that many of us live in an end-stage-capitalism hellscape), but as is often the case, real life details are usually mundane.
I’ve personally been impressed by their Atomic distros, and they’ve come a long way since I first tried vanilla Fedora with Gnome many years ago.
Windows VM is what I plan to do. I’m already running Bazzite full time on a spare laptop acting as an HTPC, and I’ve dabbled for the last several years and feel comfortable in the command line, so I don’t really see a need to waste an entire drive or partition just for Windows.
That’s good advice, though, to learn how to fix the bootloader. That’s something I don’t currently know how to do, so I’ll get on that! Thanks!
I always forget about Aurora and Bluefin. Thanks for the reminder!
Why does Leap Micro have such a better logo than the parent project?
Worse. His policies would effectively nuke a lot of the global climate progress we’ve made and set the world back decades—as if we have the time to waste.
Good to have the facts straight. It’s creepy enough on its own without inventing details.
One of these days, I’ll have to give Universal Blue a look for general computing. Bazzite is excellent, but I don’t imagine my MiL is going to care about having Steam and gamescope installed out of the box, should I ever have to do a fresh install for her.
Not implying anything, but why don’t you trust Red Hat? Because they’re a big company, or because of some other reason?
I’ve read that some people are going back to simpler tech stacks, and it feels like they’re just leaving money on the table if that demographic continues to grow.
Who knows, though? Maybe somebody new will fill in that niche.
Fucky Nvidia updates are the exact sort of thing I’m aiming to mitigate with my next OS choice. I use Bazzite on a spare laptop, and I’ve had to do rollbacks on that before; it’s extremely handy to have that capability out of the box!
Tried Aurora in a VM, and while it ran like shit (probably a VM issue, not Aurora’s), I was shocked that it reported updates, and by the next boot, it had already updated everything.
I run Bazzite on a laptop, so they’re similar, but Aurora really felt clean, polished, and ready for general use.