🧟‍♂️ Cadaver

@🧟‍♂️ Cadaver@lemmy.blahaj.zone
0 Post – 58 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

I swear Nix users are the mormons of the Linux world.

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Firefox

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This looks like someone's fetish...

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For ~100€, through a Raspberry Pi, you can stream 4K60p to your TV. From there, you are the sole master of the seas, Captain.

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Which is..?

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Is it because it's a work device ? Because except if you're not the admin of your machine, VLC will run on any potato.

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I'd say he's left

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sudo apt install qbittorrent

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Art never is neutral

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King Gizzard and the Jizzard Wizard

The POSIFLEX issue might have to do with MBR. On your final linux installation, your partition table should NOT be using gpt but mbr and that might solve the issues.

It has to do with older BIOS not recognising gpt and henceforth being unable to boot from the disk.

N.B. you might have to configure your GRUB/systemd loader accordingly.

It would be great... I'm tired of pawb.social and yiffit.net.

To each its own, but furry and furry porn are not for me.

Finland is too much north to hope for efficient solar energy.

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Take your faulty controller to a repair store mate.

If you'll be using it in a shop, as a tool and that Debian works well. Well... stick with Debian !

Did you see the specs of the "old mac" lol. Shit's a powerhouse. He could even host lemmy on it.

Try to use OnlyOffice. It's the only viable alternative to MSOffice that I have found.

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I had the same problem with a MSI GF65.

I had an Intel AX201, which is basically the same device as the intel killer wifi card on the GS65.

I battled with the issue for a very long time. It came from Windows and only from Windows. You have to disable fastboot and there is a way to shut it down "fully" which you have to do.

If that does not solve it your only way out of it is to reinstall Windows.

Because it's not about installing them, it's making them work that's not intuitive. I have an nvidia card and some linux experience, it was hard for me to set it up. If you have no background on linux, making it work might make you abandon it. In those cases it's better to go with something that has everything figured out for you.

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Fissh, a new terminal emulator to ssh on fish.

Cycling races are very polluting. Not because of the bikes but because of everything besides the bikes (cars, motocycles, cameras, plastic goodies, ...)

lol

The democratic way would have been to submit the bill to increase the retirement age to vote. It wasn't voted. It was imposed.

The bill to repeal the reform wasn't passed not because representatives voted against it. That's not how it works. It didn't pass because it didn't gain enough votes. Because you would HAVE to vote AGAINST the assembly, which is not the same as voting against a law.

Then again, it wasn't done to keep the pension system as a whole. It was done to alleviate corporate social funding. The pension system wasn't lacking.

Sorry for the lack of sources, I'm on mobile. If you want them I can search for them.

You have everything quality wise on TGx

Yeah even for linux enthusiasts, without archinstall, it is hard. at first. Then once you know what is expected it is easy. But the first time setting it up correctly is frustrating. Particularly if you forget to install intel-ucode.

I started using vim to learn rust. It's awfully powerful and I fully understand the hype.

However when I started to program, vim was NOT a good option to learn. Because you have to learn how to code and how to use the coding tool at the same time. It can be too much to take in.

Qobuz is good for streaming hi-res and... that's it.

I was pleasantly surprised by their service at first but it is subpar now... Album and tracks disappearing, Qobuz no longer working correctly on Yamaha HiFi, ... I'm quite disappointed.

Your mint setup is fine to start learning, as others have said. Start with something simple : python, javascript, ...

For programming, there are tools available on every OS. However I have found that those tools are easier to use on Linux. Okayish to use on MacOS. Programming with Windows, on the other hand is, well... it certainly is possible, but... see for yourself.

For instituitions it varies depending on each one of them. Usually they have their own tools because it is easier to organise a class if everyone works on the same IDE but if you get good enough it does Not matter what is your OS/IDE of choice. VSCodium is nice but anything like kwrite/kate/gedit/geany is good enough. Hell, even nano can get the job done.

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If I remember correctly, you can define the modifier key in KDE. Not sure though, you might have to test it out.

That would be the fastest way. Apart from that, it's very much possible by binding every possible action to different keypresses. That would be long and stenuous.

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Frankly, you're being obnoxious.

Debian is hard to master for someone coming from Windows ^^

Plus, it's pretty ugly without heavy customisation. Which ZorinOS (or Pop!_OS) ain't :)

Zorin is the best distro to learn linux when coming from Windows. I have used Zorin 15.3 and Zorin 16.

The UI is nice, simple and reminds a lot of Windows. It is easy to understand (easier than Ubuntu, Debian, Pop!_OS and Linux Mint).

It has wine preinstalled and runs smoothly.

It may be linked to the vagal nerve. Talk to a doctor about it.

Have you tried installing with yay ?

He made himself the greatest joke ever.

Joke apart I've run into these issues once or twice before. The way to go is to purge the keyring then update it from scratch.

For AUR the best way to go is to install yay (see how on ArchLinux wiki) then go from there. Normally the dependencies should install themselves easily.

It might be because I'm using Arch and everything has to be done manually 🤷

Good for you if you have it figured out ! Welcome to Linux !

Have a solid discussion with them in a neutral setting

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I really like Typewise personally. It's got a learning curve but it's really fast once you get used to it.

vim has got to you... There's no going back.