When the software you want is not in your package repository and compiling from source fails.
I’m not surprised that Tux has taken up drinking. RAM prices, Microslop, AI infestation, and his homeland is melting from underneath.
tá facil pra ninguém.
lol, limão even
limão kkkkkk
I can smell this picture. Also the asbestos roof.
that’s a sheet metal roof i think
The photo is burry but it has the deathly grey patina of asbestos fiber sheets
@TheSeveralJourneysOfReemus@lemmy.world @thethunderwolf@lemmy.dbzer0.com @linuxmemes@lemmy.world
Alongside the explicitly Portuguese (“antes / depois”) text, the place seems Brazilian, at least for me, a Brazilian. The roof is what we call “telha de zinco” (zinc tiles) and it’s popularly used as roof for small stores, bars and even houses in small towns and other humble regions, where fancier building materials can’t be afforded (too expensive). IIRC, Brazil prohibited the usage of asbestos a long time ago.
I think it’s brazilian portuguese, that is commonly thought on many platforms. After seeing it on my computer you’re probaby right, it’s probably a metal sheet. I was thinking of these pieces of shit that i know all too dearly:

@TheSeveralJourneysOfReemus@lemmy.world
@linuxmemes@lemmy.worldI think it’s brazilian portuguese, that is commonly thought on many platforms
Yeah, pretty much likely.
I particularly considered it “Portuguese” (as generically as it can go) rather than specifically “Brazilian Portuguese” precisely because the sample text isn’t long enough for me to feel whether it’s more Portuguese, Mozambican, Angolan, Macauan, or Brazilian (with our many regional variations). “Antes / Depois” is pretty much the way all the Lusophone (Portuguese-speaking) countries refer to “before / after”.
It’s worth mentioning how it only differs from Spanish (often mistaken for Portuguese by anglophone people) because of the “depois” (Spanish would be “antes y despúes”)
I was thinking of these pieces of shit that i know all too dearly:
Oh, yes, I remember having seen those roof tiles, especially during my early childhood. It’s been a long time since I haven’t seen it. The closest I saw were zinc roof tiles with layers of concrete (brick and mortar is how we often do housing around here, especially in more urbanized environments; it’s fairly common to have rough plaster extending beyond the wall) or lime-based paint (perhaps for better moisture and/or thermal insulation), which may give it an appearance of being made with asbestos fiber.
Wine, not even once!
When Linux goes closed-source and you get kicked out.
Why is that vodka green? and why is Tux serving it as if it were Asturian cider?
@quediuspayu@lemmy.dbzer0.com @merci3@lemmy.world
@linuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt’s possibly a “caipiroska”, a (delicious) beverage made of vodka, lemon juice and sugarcane sugar, quite similar to original “caipirinha” (which uses cachaça, alcohol distilled from sugarcane, instead of vodka). The green color may stem from the lemon, symbolically (green lemon) or literally (depending on whether the entire fruit was used to produce the beverage). Vodka is quite popular here in Brazil, although not as popular as cachaça and caipirinha.
Because the wrong drivers, but they work at least…
“Tux… I haven’t heard that name in a long time.”
Linux bloat, graphic description
I see myself in this meme











