Répondre au commentaire

Bit 'bout me

I'm a human being of L'nu (Mi'kmaq), Aln8bak (Abenaki), and Métis (Red River) descent. My personal site is at http://simonraven.kisikew.org/ and I've been using this new tech since around 2000, and Debian GNU/Linux since 2002. I find FOSS (Free and Open Source Software) is excellent for Indigenous people because of the liberty and freedom it gives a person or group to use a computer as they see fit, without having to pay exorbitant user fees for using a simple operating system. Most projects have a donation-based system, or have a small fee for procuring it, but usually within most budgets (many if not most come free as in no-cost). It being low cost in maintenance and usage is very advantageous for remote locations on dial-up or satellite.

Admittedly a bit sparse on multimedia software offerings, there are more and more to choose from, that do the thing you want to do with it. I think this is one area that FOSS is still lagging behind more mainstream and for-pay OSes. Nonetheless I've been able to use a Debian-only desktop/workstation for my work.

I've recently started teaching myself Python, a programming language, having a bit of background in shell scripting mostly, for administrative and personal use.

I often visit my local Friendship Centre, being very involved with my urban Indigenous community, and a long-time activist.

Répondre

Les informations contenues à l'intérieur de ce champ demeurent privées et ne seront pas montrées publiquement.
  • Internal paths in double quotes, written as "internal:node/99", for example, are replaced with the appropriate absolute URL or relative path.
  • Permettre les balises HTML autorisées: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <br /> <p> <blockquote> <sup> <sub> <img> <h3>
  • Each email address will be obfuscated in a human readable fashion or (if JavaScript is enabled) replaced with a spamproof clickable link.

Pour plus d'informations sur les options de formatage