Yeah I didn’t know we were mostly looking at planets in the Milky Way, but it makes sense. Rocky planets are very tiny compared to other stuff in the universe so it’s gotta be hard detecting them millions of light years out.
It could just be that they’re just so far that we’re looking at these planets millions/billion of years in the past, meaning there may may be life there but we can’t see it yet.
Earth looked pretty icy when it was “snowball Earth” and early Earth’s surface was full of molten rocks.
so is there a difference in downloading something from the internet and installing a ‘Linux’ version of it, or installing that through a package manager?
Installing with a package manager is easier, since it handles stuff for you. You’ll usually only download software from your browser if it’s not available in your distro’s package manager.
Package managers may have multiple repositories, these are like lists of packages, and may differ from distro to distro.
A good analogy is thinking of a package repo (short for repository) as a library, and the package manager a librarian helping you search for a book.
‘use’ wine to run windows programs but what does that mean? Do I run it like a VM? But it’s not an emulator?
It’s a compatibility layer, to put it simply (since I’m not a WINE expert) it converts Windows stuff to Linux stuff, instead of straight up running a Windows VM.
To me? I use a laptop and don’t really tinker with my hardware at all, the benefits for me is I get the latest-ish versions of software (including user applications), and there isn’t this big jump between new versions
It used to be K Desktop Environment, but it’s called Plasma since KDE became the organization behind KDE Plasma. This is because they make things other than the desktop environment, like apps such as Krita or Kdenlive, which aren’t DE specific.