A cat on catnip + a belly rub on said catnip = a cat that claws into your skin and won't let go of your hand until it's done licking for 5 minutes.
I bet it thought my hand was icecream because he had the widest eyes and when I give him icecream his eyes get wide like that.
[QUOTE=Cuon Alpinus;40152454]Did someone say LONG HAIR?
[t]http://i.imgur.com/Zx71fWQ.png[/t]
[sp]Oh god, my phone's camera is ass.[/sp]
It goes down below my shoulder blades.[/QUOTE]
you look really good
sobotnik calm down
i was complimenting his jaw line
Doesn't Google Keep save all your notes and displays them on your toaster and give you blowjobs and walk your dog and stuff
[QUOTE=Cuon Alpinus;40152454]Did someone say LONG HAIR?
[t]http://i.imgur.com/Zx71fWQ.png[/t]
[sp]Oh god, my phone's camera is ass.[/sp]
It goes down below my shoulder blades.[/QUOTE]
If you got a pair of round tinted glasses and grew a goatee, you'd totally look like Geddy Lee.
No hablo español
I'm reading an alien report and it's kinda putting my phobia to ease which is nice. I can't believe I can handle XCOM so well with it(except for at points).
[QUOTE=Bumrang;40152456]Also fuck AMD proprietary drivers on linux, they are the worst.
[editline]3rd April 2013[/editline]
merge[/QUOTE]
From my 3 months on fedora:
Fuck drivers in general.
i've been using various linux distros for my laptops/netbooks for quite a long time now, ubuntu, mint, attempted arch but that failed miserably, and now im using crunchbang which is actually going fairly well except it seems that apt is completely and utterly fucked so i cant get wine nor steam working; but hell i still really like how i've got #! set up so far so why bother
I've been using Arch for a year now and I fucking love it. It starts with only the bare necessities (drive management, internet, pacman, and a few other necessary installation tools), so you end up installing what YOU want, not what the developer wants.
This laptop that I'm on is from around 2003 and it can sometimes match the speed of my desktop simply because there is no bloat. The only problem with this is that you can really easily fuck shit up and have to go through the (most likely) painful process of fixing whatever core dependency you deleted or just starting from scratch. I've had to format this laptop 2 times already, but after a while you learn not to make mistakes like those and less errors pop up.
I mainly use this laptop for development. Programming on linux is amazing. You don't have to go through any bullshit like there is on Windows, you can get straight to the point.
There is no environment path or things like that. Need a library? "sudo pacman -S (lib name)". That's it. On Windows you would have to download it, compile it, put the .dll and .lib in their correct folder, add some stuff to the environment path, and mess around in Visual Studio until it's correct. It's a mess and I can't imagine how I did anything on that. Most of the time spent on my projects was getting libraries to work correctly.
tl;dr: Linux is amazing and you can have everything in control but it's really easy to fuck up.
i'm going to be using arch once i'm done with crunchbang, first time i tried it i got hung up at getting network card drivers working but i'm on a newer machine now so it shouldn't be as much of a hassle. also, i got dungeon crawl stone soup installed on this thing, time to never be bored again! :D
[QUOTE=Tark;40154527]i'm going to be using arch once i'm done with crunchbang, first time i tried it i got hung up at getting network card drivers working but i'm on a newer machine now so it shouldn't be as much of a hassle. also, i got dungeon crawl stone soup installed on this thing, time to never be bored again! :D[/QUOTE]
Honestly it just seems rather pointless to move from distro to distro, it doesn't really accomplish much if you run one distro for awhile and get acclimated and everything running then install another.
[editline]4th April 2013[/editline]
Aside from just familiarizing yourself with distros that use rpm or deb for the sake of learning the differences, its just kind of like WHICH ONE DO I LIKE BEST?
[QUOTE=mysteryman;40154546]Honestly it just seems rather pointless to move from distro to distro, it doesn't really accomplish much if you run one distro for awhile and get acclimated and everything running then install another.[editline]4th April 2013[/editline]Aside from just familiarizing yourself with distros that use rpm or deb for the sake of learning the differences, its just kind of like WHICH ONE DO I LIKE BEST?[/QUOTE] Well, yeah? It lets you learn new things, and I've learned a shitload by not sticking with Ubuntu just because I got acclimated to it and had everything I needed it to do working fine. I like facing problems and overcoming them (As I often have to do the further I move away from user-friendliness) because it's rewarding. It's also just preference, I didn't like Ubuntu for how much of a heavy weight it was, so I tried Arch. That was too big of a jump for me, so I went for Mint instead. That was better, but still too bloaty. Now I'm sitting on CrunchBang semi-comfortably, still working out problems and learning things, and from here I feel I could go on to Arch if I wanted or, you know, just stick with CrunchBang.It's all preference.also for some reason either facepunch or chromium don't want to let me put in new lines, what the fuck
Distros aren't massively different from each other anyways. They're all running Linux, they all have the same objective. The things that differs is their philosophies. Arch is all about power users and doing things the way you want, not the way other people say so. Ubuntu is all about user friendliness and bring a bridge between Windows and Linux.
i've only tried ubuntu and fedora, didnt like ubuntu and i have virtually no problems with fedora. It's does what i need it to do quickly, i don't give a shit about bloatware because my computer isn't from 2002, and the interface is sleek and snazzy.
[QUOTE=Bumrang;40154596]Distros aren't massively different from each other anyways. They're all running Linux, they all have the same objective. The things that differs is their philosophies. Arch is all about power users and doing things the way you want, not the way other people say so. Ubuntu is all about user friendliness and bring a bridge between Windows and Linux.[/QUOTE]
I need to sleep but Tark if you need any help with Arch you can just add me on steam.
Does anyone else feel like this year is just rocketing past?
[editline]4th April 2013[/editline]
Like, it feels like January wasn't that far off, and it feels like we just got out of February.
Maybe it's the weather, I don't know.
My greatest achievement in life is installing a quite interesting distribution of GNU+Linux, Gentoo Linux.
I just saw a stand up comedy show by Rhys Nicholson. I always thought that that sort of flamboyant voice (not excessively high pitch, lisp) was annoying. I like guys, not guys who sound like girls, I used to think. I couldn't take my eyes of this guy though and it was his voice that did it. So rather than being annoying turns out I find flamboyant guys attractive. Can't say for really flamboyant but I am willing to bet they probably would be in my mind.
[sp]Most of his material was about gay sex so that might have helped.[/sp]
[Editline]april[/editline]
Sorry to interrupt Linux talk. My Dad has only ever used linux. I used it for the games he had on one version. There was a rip off of bomberman with the linux penguin and you could set timers for making tea but I just pretended the Linux system was making the tea and then it would say "your tea is ready" and I would pretend to drink it. Linux: it's all good news in my experience.
I never got into Linux because Windows runs fine enough for me, and most of my games and software don't work on it. Namely CS6, I need my CS6.
i'm gay for jontron
No one is gay for me :(
i'm only gay for dick
that's the only exception
[QUOTE=Bumrang;40154506]I've been using Arch for a year now and I fucking love it. It starts with only the bare necessities (drive management, internet, pacman, and a few other necessary installation tools), so you end up installing what YOU want, not what the developer wants.
This laptop that I'm on is from around 2003 and it can sometimes match the speed of my desktop simply because there is no bloat. The only problem with this is that you can really easily fuck shit up and have to go through the (most likely) painful process of fixing whatever core dependency you deleted or just starting from scratch. I've had to format this laptop 2 times already, but after a while you learn not to make mistakes like those and less errors pop up.
I mainly use this laptop for development. Programming on linux is amazing. You don't have to go through any bullshit like there is on Windows, you can get straight to the point.
There is no environment path or things like that. Need a library? "sudo pacman -S (lib name)". That's it. On Windows you would have to download it, compile it, put the .dll and .lib in their correct folder, add some stuff to the environment path, and mess around in Visual Studio until it's correct. It's a mess and I can't imagine how I did anything on that. Most of the time spent on my projects was getting libraries to work correctly.
tl;dr: Linux is amazing and you can have everything in control but it's really easy to fuck up.[/QUOTE]
I put about 512 MB of RAM in an old PII rig for Arch. Turns out it maybe only uses 40 MB for the FTP server, Cups server, and whatever I happen to be running.
no one is gay for me either :(
[QUOTE=SPESSMEHREN;40156245]no one is gay for me either :([/QUOTE]
We can be gay for each other? :wink:
[video=youtube;DXYWjuDu_rs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXYWjuDu_rs[/video]
Don't ask, just take this.
Spring is in the airrr
[QUOTE=Xieneus;40156594]Spring is in the airrr[/QUOTE]
Not for ol' Rockford here. It's still cold, and it still dips below freezing at night.
Here's hoping Summer's warm, but not by last year's standards.
[editline]4th April 2013[/editline]
Also, Gillette can go away with their shaving gel, stuff irritates my skin real bad.
[QUOTE=garychencool;40152420]that 60mb monthly limit. and hey, a fellow evernote user!
give google keep a try if you haven't done so already, it's the light weight note keeper.[/QUOTE]
google keep is only good for to-do lists and the odd photo of something you need to remember for a while, as an archiving utility it blows
[editline]4th April 2013[/editline]
[QUOTE=Cuon Alpinus;40152454]Did someone say LONG HAIR?
[t]http://i.imgur.com/Zx71fWQ.png[/t]
[sp]Oh god, my phone's camera is ass.[/sp]
It goes down below my shoulder blades.[/QUOTE]
the weird combo of some straight and some curly is really cool, is it naturally like that?
because its badass and if you cut that i'll burn your house down
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