I know it’s a privacy focused browser, and I’ve used it on my iPad. It’s a decent enough browser. The best feature is that on iOS it actually supports plugins like ublock.
The isn’t snark. The answer is simply greed. The rich want to be richer. They want it all. The mentality is, “I don’t care about anyone else, I want it all.”
Edit: removed a redundant sentence
I got about halfway through the first episode before I turned it off.
Oh she’s listened to the entire contract fulfillment garbage album.
My wife loves Van Morrison, and I enjoy a lot of his music as well, but we both hate how much of an asshole he is
Ah. Yeah. I think then you’ll want to look into cloudflare tunnels. I believe that should get you through the cgnt and deal with the dynamic IP ll in one go.
You can deal with the non-static IP by using duckdns.org
Another copy. Would have been crazy if it was the exact copy I had.
I was at a used bookshop the other day and found the same Caldera Open Linux 2.2 book and cd that I used to install my first linux distro on a pc. Man that was exciting!
You’re welcome!!
I’m no expert so take this with an appropriately sized grain of salt.
You should be able to install KDE on whatever distribution you decide. If you want KDE 6, you may have to add a repo, but it should be as simple as sudo <package manager install incantation> whatever-KDE-is-named-in-the-repo
If you want stability, Debian is the go to, but the tradeoff there is older packages. However if manjaro is working for you, don’t fix what isn’t broken. I don’t know how good Debian is for gaming, but honestly any distribution should be just fine for dev. Considering what steam has done with Arch as the base, it may be worth considering Arch as an option.
To the partitions, I’m not knowledgeable enough to make recommendations as to what you should or shouldn’t touch. My instinct is to not touch /boot/efi
Something can definitely go wrong when playing with partitions, so make that backup of everything as planned and test it before you make any changes to the system.
Super!
I feel this
youruser:youruser
just means the user’s group. For instance, on my fedora 40 install, my user (bippy, just a silly name), is the username for my user, but also the name of the group that my user belongs to.
So when I do a chown
, I typically do chown -R
bippy:bippy path/to/directory
If you wanted to give permissions to a different group on your system, but also to your main user, you could do a chown -R bippy:wheel /path/to/directory
(wheel
is an example group name, which is similar to sudoers
)
My wife and I have been enjoying it. Definitely worth the watch
You could write yourself a bash script to do this.
Element/matrix does indeed have a web version. You can use https://app.element.io, or you can self host the web client.
MTV!