

Read the article, but my question was not answered:
Is spaghetti amongst these ‘most objects’?
Or will spaghetti breaking remain a mystery?


Read the article, but my question was not answered:
Is spaghetti amongst these ‘most objects’?
Or will spaghetti breaking remain a mystery?


Those stupid trees are working against us! Don’t they know we are amidst a climate crisis? Why should I reduce my footprint when China and the African Forest are not?
(Sarcasm, obviously)
How about dual boot, but the Windows OS is never online?
I used to be Linux only, but after I’ve got a new machine with Win11 preinstalled, I went dual boot " justfor now until I got all my apps running on Linux". Well, it’s been a while and I still didn’t figure out how to run some apps, so dual boot turned out to be a bit more permanent.
However, since I don’t have WiFi and Windows starts sucking my mobile data once connected, I established a strict ‘Windows must never be connected to my hotspot’ policy. So it never updates.
I still plan to go back to Linux only, because I just like open source and dislike Windows for spyware and thinking it would be smarter than the user (which in my case is probably true, but still, I take my pride in being able to screw up my own OS if I make a mistake). But at the moment I’m out of ideas for certain things not running on Linux, so my machine is still punished with a secundary Win OS.
Apparently my information was outdated. But for decades scientists were unable to explain why spaghetti usually breaks into more parts than two, when bended.
Here, have something to read: link to news.mit.edu article