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owenfromcanada
There’s a decent community of people telling you that you’re the problem. To ignore that is flawed thinking on your part.
You have two options: ignore them and continue to bitch and moan about how wrong everyone else is, or you can do some self examination and maybe be a better person for it. Your call.
If everywhere you go smells like shit, check your shoe.
In theory, you should be able to remove any high-level applications you don’t want, and you should be fine. In practice, it might not be so clean and easy.
The reason there are so many distros out there is because lots of people have different needs and wants. Mint is designed to be an easy-to-use OS out of the box, so it contains lots of default applications. The target audience of Mint are people who want this behavior.
If you want a more minimal or custom install, consider using a distro that is geared toward that (e.g., Arch, Alpine, Debian w/o desktop). If you need to run Mint specifically for testing, then it depends on what kind of testing you’re doing–if it’s for an end-user test case, you’ll probably want to leave all the default stuff on there as that’s a better representation of the target system. Otherwise you’re fine to uninstall anything you don’t want, but it’s possible that the dependency tree isn’t perfect and you might need to troubleshoot a little.
So… we’re at the point where it’s more concise to state which heat records aren’t being set daily?
Andre Rush is a pretty cool guy. Does a lot of charity work for veterans.
It depends on how much money it is, and whether you keep it all.
If the amount were, say, less than 10 million, you’d probably do exactly what you say. If the amount were more but you gave a bunch away to have around 10 mil or less, same thing.
If the amount is billions and you keep it all for yourself, that’s when it starts doing things to you. In order to keep that for yourself, you have to justify it internally–why is it you deserve this money while others are struggling? The only way to justify it is to demonize the poor–believing that poverty is a moral failing, or otherwise believing that you’re better than others.
Extreme wealth hoarding is bad for everyone–both the poor and the rich.
If you haven’t already played it, definitely play Rocket Edition. It’s not designed for increased difficulty, though I found it was a bit more challenging than vanilla. But the writing is phenomenal.
Duh, it’s the internet