I guess it’s not relevant for your setup, but I like rofi because there is a fork that works in Wayland, and it’s the only Wayland window switcher I have found that isn’t tied to a specific window manager.
Just a basic programmer living in California
I guess it’s not relevant for your setup, but I like rofi because there is a fork that works in Wayland, and it’s the only Wayland window switcher I have found that isn’t tied to a specific window manager.
To start the firewall after you stopped it:
sudo systemctl start firewalld
systemctl
is part of systemd - it starts and stops various services, shows statuses, lists available services, etc.
There is documentation on opening ports here, plus more details on enabling & disabling the firewall: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/quick-docs/firewalld/#_controlling_ports_using_firewalld
Probably not directly helpful, but Nix packages for Chromium and Electron apps are set up so that you can switch to native Wayland mode globally by setting an environment variable, NIXOS_OZONE_WL=1
I don’t know of any global setting that isn’t distro-specific.
That’s a different form
From what I’ve learned revolutions are often accompanied by circumstances where people are desperate due to lack of basic necessities, especially food.
The French revolution was preceded by a serious food shortage. Remember that “let them eat cake” comment? One of the key events, the Women’s March which displaced the king and queen from Versailles, was specifically motivated by demands for food.
The European People’s Spring saw lots of revolutions across Europe in 1848-1849 including in France, Italy, Bavaria, Austria, Hungary. That was about the same time as a continent-wide grain shortage on top of an economic crisis.
The Russian revolution of 1917 came at a time when a combination of WW1, bad leadership, and an extra cold winter led to food shortages, and fuel shortages so people were starving and freezing at the same time.
I love the name!
This seems like the right answer to me. Whether or not you decide to dual boot, make one of these USB keys so you can recover if something goes wrong.
When I was using Debian I found I could generally get the latest version of software I wanted from Nix if it wasn’t in the main Debian repos, or was outdated. Nix works quite well on any Linux distro - it doesn’t interfere with the rest of the system.
That comic really came out with a banger on day 1
All I can tell you is that this is done differently for each shell. So decide whether you want completions for bash, zsh, fish, all of the above, or whatever, and look at the docs for the relevant shells.
I think you want to remove the c
because that means “create” an archive, and you’re missing a z
which applies gzip decompression/compression
This is why I switched to labelling USB sticks with two-character codes, and I keep a file that lists the current content of each stick.
I think this is good advice. Don’t over-think it!
I’ve often thought that the people working on herpes treatments probably don’t get the credit they deserve
Thanks for the reply! Yes I have been trying WineGE. I didn’t realize it had special media support, that’s good to know.
Anyone else read these newsletter titles in Pixlriff’s voice? “This week, in Hermitcraft Gnome!”
Sourcehut is already federated! The workflows use a combination of email (which is federated), and git clones (which are decentralized)
It’s great that the system is so efficient. But things do come up. I once worked with an LSP server that was so hungry that I had to upgrade from 32 to 64gb to stop the OOM crashes. (Tbf I only ran out of memory when running the LSP server and compiler at the same time - but hey, I have work to do!) But now since I’m working in a different area I’m just way over-RAMed.
Modern frameworks like Playwright do a good job of avoiding those waits. So the tests are less flaky, and are faster.
I recognize those from every Serpa Design terrarium video ever made: “Next I put in springtails to control fungus, and eat dead plant matter.”