

Is it only happening with folders that are or have symlinks?


Is it only happening with folders that are or have symlinks?


Kanji is a derivative of older Mandarin character sets. That’s why they look alike. Modern Kanji is of course dissimilar, but the glyphs still look similar, so unless you know one or the other deeply, I wouldn’t find it odd for people unfamiliar with either to be able to tell some of them apart.
The example characters you’ve provided do look fairly similar to me, though I’m somewhat familiar with Kanji and can normally tell the difference.
If you’re looking for something hosted, ProtonDocs is fine, however you’ll need an account for each collaborator which could get expensive.
Lots of mentions of HedgeDoc, but it’s only for Markdown.
Collabora sounds more in line with what you’re looking for. Nextcloud Office might be a bit lacking.
The distro doesn’t matter, the Desktop Environment does.
If they are used to MacOS and want something simple and “out of the way”, go with Gnome.
If they are used to Windows, go with KDE.
Fedora is probably the most straightforward to install and manage right now. You won’t need to “lock down” anything if you don’t give them sudo credentials.and just a regular user account.


Open Source projects get lots of free features for being on GitHub. Nobody else is beating that offering at current.


Most are props. Watch any of those comedians that walk around with Scotch glasses and see how many times they actually take a drink.


Linux is the most deployed OS on the planet, and the comparisons are not even close.
If you mean just for Desktop, it depends on what’s happening with the MacBook Neo, and if Microsoft gets their shit together and reverses course I suppose.


Just trying this out to see what happens, but…
Dick


Look up elsewhere about the reputation Brother has with compatibility. Personal experience: never fails. That’s their jam.


Trust me. It is.


This has more details: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GnomeKeyring/SecurityFAQ


The security model skews towards convenience versus absolute security, meaning automation is it’s goal, not perfect security. They use a reasonable amount of security to protect unauthorized access, meaning untrusted apps can’t access keys by default, and container apps only have selective access. AppArmor is supposed to be handling some DBUS interactions in the background to prevent any old app from grabbing everything, but again, automation is the purpose here.
If you don’t have a reasonably trusted system, then sure, it’s about as secure as any other password manager. I remember reading some time ago there was a plan to make a global framework for trusted application.accessnto things like this, but it was shot down for being “oppressive” in the same way as Microsoft’s trust app mess.
Ideally there would be an advanced mode where each app is granted access to specific keys, and that interaction is controlled by the user. This would never be the default obviously as the user interaction would be an insane annoyance to people who don’t care.


Depends on what specific things you mean, but it’s default acts similarly, and there are a large number of themes like so: https://github.com/GolDNenex/forgejo-purple-fever


This timeline.
No gaming distro outperforms any other distro by any measurable means a user would notice.


FEX has been an Open Source project for quite some time. Valve has a use-case for it, so has been contributing developer resources and funding for the project, but Valve themselves did not create it. It’s simply a useful tool in a pivot they want to make for their portable gaming devices and expansion.
These spam accounts are getting old…
“…resigned with my own key…”
That’s a “no” from me, dawg. This isnt a distro, this a later revision you could easily just target and run. I don’t think you know exactly what constitutes an entire distribution.