Agility0971

@Agility0971@lemmy.world
6 Post – 66 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

Ahh, relative pressure

Will any pressure below 1 bar work at all? Wont it just suck the air in instead?

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no, a container is not a virtual machine. Containers, unlike virtual machines, uses the same kernel as host system. That means you cannot spin up a windows container on linux because windows uses NT kernel and linux uses linux kernel. What containers like that will in fact do is allow you to get applications from different distros as if you were running that distro.

For your use case (windows xp game emulation) there are two options. A virtual machine or using wine. My suggestion is to try first "bottles" and then VM

It says it's scraped and not leaked

i disagree with the color of the text. too much contrast. may I suggest it being dark blue?

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Just using duckduckgo. I'm not happy with my search results as they heavily prioritize clickbait CEO blogs instead of showing official documentation / sources.

Meh, screen angle is constant. Not impressed until it supports screens with a constant angular velocity.

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please do, the FOSS community need open source porn alternative

The exiting part will be if they launch a passive cooled arm based laptop.

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pipehub

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Well, if they would not nerf it maybe it woyld not go so much down

There are only two distros in the world. Those that people hate and those that no one uses

Always to remember to vacum the floor after a pc build to get rid of excessive screws

If you can you should try to savve up for a framework laptop

Dude. Just close them

was kicked in the head like this once. Flew a meter into the wall

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more photos of the components would be great. maybe even get shell access 😈?

I know which NOT to buy

why not uptime-kuma?

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The program that asks for password graphically is polkit. As far as I've searched online it only supports bypassing password prompts if you're admin on the system. It does not have a password less prompt like in Windows. I'm using this and this as source in case you want to disable it all together. I'm not a mint user my self so I cannot validate this without spinning up virtual machine. I would recommend the community just look at whatever I wrote for 24h and mention some issues that might occur. I'll update it if someone points out any issues.

Open any terminal (sorry) and copy one line at a time into the terminal and hit enter. After the first line you'll be asked to enter the password. For the consecutive commands password will not be asked. On the last command you'll open a graphical text editor and make sure certain text is present.

sudo su
mkdir -p /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/
cd /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/
touch 49-nopasswd_global.rules
xdg-open 49-nopasswd_global.rules

You should now see a text editor appear with a file opened. Copy this and paste it in the file at the bottom. Then save, close and reboot.

/*
 *  https://lemmy.world/comment/1396602
 *  Allow members of the wheel group to execute any actions
 * without password authentication, similar to "sudo NOPASSWD:"
 */
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
    if (subject.isInGroup("wheel")) {
        return polkit.Result.YES;
    }
});

This is a security risk as you might understand, but it's your computer and you can do whatever you want. If you have any issues just post them here and maybe we'll figure something out.

If you can get a metal body laptop, I would suggest you do. Metal chassis with Linux will last a long while. Programming will not take much resources (and if it does, rewrite your code). Since you're into light programming like python any distro would be fine. It feels like the community has somewhat agreed to suggest Linux Mint to new users so I'll support that.

Step brother, help me compile the kernel please!

written in rust

👀

What the hell is JMAP anyway? Never heard of Another new alternative to IMAP. Can be read here.

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They didn't. LibreOffice devs wanted to provide support exclusively through Flatpak. Thus making native installations not supported. In stead of spending time on maintaining native package they just tell users to use Flatpak. https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org/thread/46ZZ6GZ2W3G4OJYX3BIWTAW75H37TVW6/

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arch

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root@archiso /mnt/arch # btrfs fi us .
Overall:
    Device size:		 931.01GiB
    Device allocated:		 526.02GiB
    Device unallocated:		 404.99GiB
    Device missing:		     0.00B
    Device slack:		     0.00B
    Used:			 480.21GiB
    Free (estimated):		 447.51GiB	(min: 245.02GiB)
    Free (statfs, df):		 447.51GiB
    Data ratio:			      1.00
    Metadata ratio:		      2.00
    Global reserve:		 512.00MiB	(used: 0.00B)
    Multiple profiles:		        no

Data,single: Size:520.01GiB, Used:477.49GiB (91.82%)
   /dev/nvme0n1p2	 520.01GiB

Metadata,DUP: Size:3.00GiB, Used:1.36GiB (45.45%)
   /dev/nvme0n1p2	   6.00GiB

System,DUP: Size:8.00MiB, Used:80.00KiB (0.98%)
   /dev/nvme0n1p2	  16.00MiB

Unallocated:
   /dev/nvme0n1p2	 404.99GiB

root@archiso /mnt/arch # btrfs device stats .
[/dev/nvme0n1p2].write_io_errs    0
[/dev/nvme0n1p2].read_io_errs     0
[/dev/nvme0n1p2].flush_io_errs    0
[/dev/nvme0n1p2].corruption_errs  19317
[/dev/nvme0n1p2].generation_errs  0
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Looks great!, thanks for sharing!

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I was copying passwords and usernames all the time. This comment made me realize I didn't configure it properly

*stirr untill fully evaporated

It's a KINGSTON SA2000M81000G. Here is a "datasheet".

I've looked up some of the inode numbers in the logs and they point to some application state data in /var so reinstalling application could bring those files back.

I've never touched SMART before since I've assumed it's an HDD thing. Anyway. I've installed smartmontools. nvme ssds don't report smart stats like for hdds so this answer suggested looking for Percentage used in stead.

root@archiso ~ # smartctl -a --test=long /dev/nvme0n1 | grep "Used"
Percentage Used:                    2%

It could be true that the firmware is not optimal but I could not find any news about that like you have for the 980. gnome software should keep firmware up to date in the background but just for good measure I ran it in live environment as well. I will probably get a new ssd at some point in the future and maybe use this old one for non critical storage in the future.

thx

I tried with emojiea and it worked. what would break it though?

edit: nvm something broke after a reboot. neofetch reports the hostname as 'archlinux' instead of whatever is inside /etc/hostname. matlab drive connector reset and initializer dialog poped up which it did not do before.

why is this lame?

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ahh, didn't know. Thanks!

Install sddm, disable gdm, reboot.

I've had to borrow computers with fn and ctrl swapped. I understand shat you mean

RAID? how can I check? I'm not using RAID as far as I know

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root@archiso ~ # lsblk
NAME        MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
loop0         7:0    0   673M  1 loop /run/archiso/airootfs
sda           8:0    0 476.9G  0 disk 
└─sda1        8:1    0 476.9G  0 part 
sdb           8:16   0 119.2G  0 disk 
└─sdb1        8:17   0 119.2G  0 part 
sdc           8:32   1  14.4G  0 disk 
├─sdc1        8:33   1   778M  0 part 
└─sdc2        8:34   1    15M  0 part 
nvme0n1     259:0    0 931.5G  0 disk 
├─nvme0n1p1 259:1    0   511M  0 part 
└─nvme0n1p2 259:2    0   931G  0 part 
root@archiso ~ # btrfs check /dev/nvme0n1p2
Opening filesystem to check...
Checking filesystem on /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID: 145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100
[1/7] checking root items
[2/7] checking extents
[3/7] checking free space tree
[4/7] checking fs roots
[5/7] checking only csums items (without verifying data)
[6/7] checking root refs
[7/7] checking quota groups skipped (not enabled on this FS)
found 514161029120 bytes used, no error found
total csum bytes: 496182240
total tree bytes: 1464221696
total fs tree bytes: 813809664
total extent tree bytes: 57655296
btree space waste bytes: 248053148
file data blocks allocated: 4385471590400
 referenced 512920408064
btrfs check /dev/nvme0n1p2  4.15s user 1.66s system 62% cpu 9.316 total

yes I'm sure.

root@archiso /mnt/arch # cat ./etc/fstab 
# Static information about the filesystems.
# See fstab(5) for details.

#      
# /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID=145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100	/         	btrfs     	rw,relatime,ssd,discard=async,space_cache=v2,subvolid=256,subvol=/@	0 0

# /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID=145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100	/.snapshots	btrfs     	rw,relatime,ssd,discard=async,space_cache=v2,subvolid=260,subvol=/@.snapshots	0 0

# /dev/nvme0n1p1
UUID=4BF3-12AA      	/boot     	vfat      	rw,relatime,fmask=0022,dmask=0022,codepage=437,iocharset=ascii,shortname=mixed,utf8,errors=remount-ro	0 2

# /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID=145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100	/home     	btrfs     	rw,relatime,ssd,discard=async,space_cache=v2,subvolid=257,subvol=/@home	0 0

# /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID=145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100	/var/cache/pacman/pkg	btrfs     	rw,relatime,ssd,discard=async,space_cache=v2,subvolid=259,subvol=/@pkg	0 0

# /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID=145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100	/var/log  	btrfs     	rw,relatime,ssd,discard=async,space_cache=v2,subvolid=258,subvol=/@log	0 0

curl cheat.sh/command is more useful because it just spits out common examples. man is only useful if you need complete documentation or need to build a complex oneliner.

I never remember hot to extract tar files. Would you dive into the documentation for that or look up a cheatsheet?