

Those have all been replaced with em dashes (—
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Those have all been replaced with em dashes (—
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I was surprised to see they switched from wpa_supplicant to iwd. I love iwd on it’s own, but the last time I tried to use it with NetworkManager it blew up on me. Seems like that may still be an issue.
This is unrealistic, agile stages aren’t missing unusual pieces that aren’t quite critical but probably should be there anyway.
Don’t forget about linkwarden
Just cross your fingers nobody attempts to import it…
Why? They are just bringing to light the tools already being used by corps behind closed doors.
Edit: Seems the author wants to paint a different picture. Either extreme CYA or you were correct.
Nah man, waterfall technique applies to everything.
I could never write essays by hand. Too often I would write out a paragraph just to read it, break it up, and subsequently rewrite both parts.
Pinchflat is one of the good containers that doesn’t try to play with ID remapping or anything. You just need a container quadlet like the following:
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
[Container]
Image=ghcr.io/kieraneglin/pinchflat:latest
Environment=TZ=CHANGEME
Volume=CHANGEME/config:/config
Volume=CHANGEME/downloads:/downloads
PublishPort=127.0.0.1:8945:8945
It’ll run as the quadlet user id by default.
I haven’t heard anyone talk about puppy Linux in a bit. That used to be the go to for ultra lightweight setups.
All of these alternatives and you missed the best one ripgrep (rg). The other ones in my opinion are nice to have. Recursive multi-threaded grep that respects gitignore files is a must for me.
I’ve also witnessed matrix structure break down when too many methods of communication are used. It’s all very brittle.
“I want to know why this is broken. How to fix it can come later.”
Or override the TERM variable in your ssh config. Setting it to an xterm value has been supported by any niche term I’ve used over the years without sacrificing any of the usual functions.
Arch. Started using it in high school. Never had a reason to switch. Now I’m just regularly frustrated by other distros trying to make things easier by abstracting simple configurations behind layers of custom scripts.
AUR, when I can. I run my own binary package repo. App images are an interesting concept, but usually they are compiled against ancient versions of glibc for increased compatibility. Optimizations and CVE patches may or may not be applied, LD lookups are longer, etc.
I’ll keep saying it, this is called a Word Processor. They were cool when they were simple microcontrollers and LCD displays, not so much now.
Sway still primarily counts as a WM + Compositor, but considering it has keymaps, autostart, and libinput config mechanisms embedded in it, I would say it borders a desktop environment.
One hell of a consolation prize
Well, to be fair the 10 series was actually an impressive improvement to what was available. Since then I switched to AMD for better SW support. I know since then the improvements have dwindled.