

If it is truly random, where every outcome is equally likely, then Beethoven’s 5th could be the first thing produced. It could also take an infinite amount of time to produce.


If it is truly random, where every outcome is equally likely, then Beethoven’s 5th could be the first thing produced. It could also take an infinite amount of time to produce.


So mostly good Vorin men and some women a little below average?
I recently got a think pad from the prior generation, so like 2-3 years old. It’s been good for most things, but I’m not trying to play the latest graphics heavy game on it either.
This is multiple articles mushed together. I suggest separating into articles that each have a specific purpose and message. The windows/Microsoft discussion can be on, the intro to Linux another (the burger shop stuff), the distros another, and lastly the installation stuff.
That said, having switched to Linux about a year ago for exactly the reasons you mentioned, I would not have found this article useful. There are many other resources that cover each of these topics in more helpful and friendly ways. This article is both too broad and lacking depth where needed. It sounds a little bit like your personal journal and a narrative of your path. It may be helpful for you personally to write that down, but I’m struggling to see how this helps a potential reader.
Some questions to consider:
What do think a reader would do next after reading your article?
What value or message would they take away from it?
Who is your audience and what new knowledge should they have after reading this?
Yes, that’s right. Which means that any specific outcome is essentially impossible to occur. But given infinite time, they all would occur.