This week's donation went to Panda3D. It's a FOSS game engine used by a variety of games such as the FOSS racing game "Yorg". The code is licensed using the Modified/3Clause BSD License.
The project's main website is here:
The source code is on Github:
https://github.com/panda3d/panda3d
The project has a presence on Mastodon:
https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@panda3d
If you wish to help the project financially you can do so using their Open Collective:
today, bonus: realized an alsa-sof-firmware update going stable in #fedora 39 broke upgrade to f40, filed a blocker bug to get the matching f40 update pushed and worked around the issue in openqa - https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2274833 , https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/os-autoinst-distri-fedora/c/a07ad202404c4d31898f0dbabb0c777e60faf499?branch=main
Anybody interested in the subject should look up anything written by John Taylor Gatto. Man was spot on.
I prefer GhostBSD myself because it saves me from having to install Mate after the OS since ot's preinstalled on Ghost. If that weren't an option then i'd pick OpenBSD because security matters most to me next to privacy.
no idea how far this will reach but let's try:
if I were to start learning more about one of the listed BSD operating systems, which would you recommend? Guessing the answer could be different if we're talking about daily desktop usage vs server, so maybe clarify your answer via a reply if you can (fwiw, probably more interested in daily desktop usage, but open to whatever too).
My father used to walk 10km a day even in his seventies. Did him wonders.
The sleep is the hardest for me. The rest is either already achieved or close to it for me.
Holy shit we actually won something that isn't hockey.
Scared ? At this point i'm happy to lose them.
Then bite something they're going in dry.
I have been gaming since 1992 and building PCs since 2003. I enjoy Linux, supporting FOSS projects and am a tinfoil hat connoisseur.