Also, it is inspired by a Polish service, Wykop which developed its specific language
Also, it is inspired by a Polish service, Wykop which developed its specific language
It’s a tool (and protocol, I think) for managing displays in X11. It’s displayed among two Windows tools in the Protonfixes changelog.
Wait, what xrandr is doing in Proton?
Zephyr is an actual operating system, but it’s not Linux
Heh, I thought about blocking them like a thousand times, but they are sometimes sharing neutral or interesting information so I’m just trying to ignore this type of comments
How is it progressing so fast compared to Servo? Isn’t Servo being developed for a longer time?
Downvoted for posting news? Really?
I thought for a minute that Linux now panics when trying to play DRM’d content
Even when you don’t know the language, you can judge if something is an ad just by an overly excited tone of voice. I wonder if someone has tried writing an ad detection algorithm already. It would still be a lot heavier on resources than SponsorBlock.
I don’t know about its derivatives, but Mandriva had something similar.
LaTeX and ConTeXt are both macros for TeX. LyX is a graphical editor which outputs LaTeX.
I didn’t see it until I read your comment
Actually, PulseEffects has been renamed into EasyEffects and is PipeWire only now
for dead simple scripts, so they will be a tiny bit more portable and run a tiny bit faster. The lack of arrays causes too much pain in longer scripts. I would love to use Fish, but it lacks a strict mode.set -euo pipefail
line. It will make Bash error on non-zero exit code, undefined variables and non-zero exit codes in commands in pipe. Also, always use shellcheck. It’s extremely easy to make a mistake in Bash. If you want to check the single command exit code manually, just wrap it in set +e
and set -e
.main
function definition with ArgumentParser
instantiated. Then at the end of the script the main
function is called wrapped in try … except KeyboardInterrupt: exit(130)
which should be a default behavior.type some_command
. Oh, and read about abbreviations in Fish. It always expands the abbreviation, so you see what you execute.I don’t have the “Used space” column, probably because I have quota disabled. I managed to find out using btdu, that the snapshot 1137 takes ~8.3 GiB.
I cannot delete it using that command, because it is marked with “+” which means it is the “btrfs default subvolume”, according to snapper manual. I wonder if there is still a way to get rid of it.
No, I think they meant that you get better resource usage when you install an app as a Flatpak instead of a system package. You get the same benefit in a traditional distro too, if you use Flatpaks, it’s just that immutable distros kind of force you to use them.
Don’t use the NVIDIA installer, as it conflicts with the package manager. Use the nvidia-kernel-dkms
package from the official Debian repository
Ventoy is a godsend in that case. If you have a big enough USB stick, you can just put all distros you wanna try on it
Sans: Cantarell
Serif: Linux Libertine
Monospace: JetBrains Mono and Fira Code
Is it about restoring window position and size?