moobythegoldensock
You’ve gotten a lot of good replies, so I’ll give you an example:
My wife and I set up a Minecraft server on an old work computer of hers. We would SSH in, start the server, and play. However, if the host lost the SSH session, the entire server would crash because the session would close.
With tmux, we could attach, start the server, and unattach. I could start the server and later my wife could attach to close it. I could SSH on my phone via iSH, attach, start the server, unattach, and close the app. We could troubleshoot mods together, since we could both see everything that happened in the session on our screens.
It offered a level of flexibility a traditional SSH session doesn’t give.
Your PC can run any distro smoothly. What are you looking for that Mint doesn’t provide?
The sad truth is that businesses think giving rich people free things will make them more money. Why would a fashion designer invite her to a private exhibition and feed her caviar? They think she’ll buy a lot of product. Why does the hotel give her a free room in exchange for a picture? They assume she’ll rent 100 rooms to other people on social media. Why does no one kick her out of the VIP lounge? They assumed she paid for it with an overpriced ticket.
It’s all transactional to those people.
Probably, but we have no actual evidence of them at the moment.
Ubuntu around 2006-2007, not sure the exact one I used.
The Godfather Part II
When Michael is told about the abortion, you see him register surprise, then hurt, then anger before he finally lashes out. The scene only takes a couple seconds, but you can see the progression in front of your eyes.