Uh... not for any particular reason. It was just a cool <ahref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_hack">domain hack</a> with the .me domain, and it contains everyone's favorite math variables x, y, and z!
If you want to install a graphical app, try opening up Discover in a remote desktop session and searching for the app. Otherwise, try <ahref="https://git.exozy.me/exozyme/exozyme/wiki/Nix">Nix</a>.
Files are your hard drive are visible only to admins unless you encrypt it. The KDE Plasma desktop has a nice Vaults feature in the system tray for file encryption. Admins cannot view your remote desktop sessions unless they change your password, so you can be sure that as long as your password hasn't been tampered with, your data is safe.
We don't collect any more data than what Arch Linux does by default, such as your IP address. Your data is never saved to anywhere else except on the exozyme server and no one can see it except for server admins. If you decide to delete your account, we will delete all of your data from the server. Yeah, we're pretty serious about protecting your data and privacy!
<h4>The command line is behaving weirdly, commands I copied from the internet don't work, editing my <i>~/.bashrc</i> isn't working, and I can't change my shell!</h4>
These are all symptons of due to using <ahref="https://fishshell.com/">Fish</a> as the default shell for new users, since it's simpler and friendlier than Bash. Unfortunately, Fish is not very compatible with Bash commands. If you're blindly copying commands from the internet (you probably shouldn't do that anyways), run <i>bash</i> first to get a Bash shell before pasting them in. If you want to run commands when starting the shell like a <i>~/.bashrc</i>, the equivalent for Fish is <i>~/.config/fish/config.fish</i>. To change your shell, ask us on Matrix about it.
<h4>Help! My remote desktop is glitching out and I want to reset it!</h4>
<p>
Log in to <ahref="https://hub.exozy.me">exohub</a> or <ahref="https://git.exozy.me/exozyme/exozyme/wiki/SSH">SSH</a> and run the command <i>pkill -9 -u $USER</i> to kill all your programs and processes. Note that you'll lose all unsaved work!
</p>
<h4>I need help with something!</h4>
<p>
You know the drill: ask on <ahref="https://matrix.to/#/!epVJFHxAwGJBqjgGoQ:exozy.me?via=exozy.me&via=matrix.org">Matrix</a>! If you aren't able to do that, shoot us an email at <ahref="mailto:help@exozy.me">help@exozy.me</a>.