[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 weeks ago

Are they based on Firefox ESR? That made me quit Floorp, it was pretty disappointing to be on a legacy reskin of Firefox.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works -2 points 1 month ago

I dunno man, complaining about the part of the democratic process where you get to vote your party's candidate seems pretty basic democracy to me, but I must not understand American "democracy" 🤷

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 2 points 7 months ago

Yeah, don't look past the veneer of the Prevent Cancer Foundation (and GDQ's founders are pretty cozy with them). Sure they're saints compared to The Completionist (& co.), but they mostly just do education/outreach which, while important, is completely US based and no doubt doubles as soliciting/fundraising, and don't really fund research nearly as much as you would probably guess (their 2022 financial statements indicate 4.6m spent on education, 800k spent on outreach, 1.44m on fundraising and only 1.1m on research). If you're outside the US you're unlikely to ever be impacted by their work. Their salaries are also way higher than DWB USA.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 3 points 10 months ago

If it's just the dirty flag (it was uncleanly unmounted) you can try

ntfsfix -d /dev/sdc1

Still probably better to boot into Windows and let it deal with it (ntfs tools are still reverse engineered stuff after all), and check journalctl before doing it, but it works in a pinch.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 1 points 11 months ago

I am this exact case and it's getting better. A month ago I installed Arch on my Nvidia desktop and it had multiple problems: returning from sleep, really bad cursor lag hitches, video would freeze at random, applications would flicker, etc. Nowadays most of it is gone, unfortunately the really bad freezes after changing resolution on monitors are still there though

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 2 points 11 months ago

Idk if I would suggest Endeavour to a first time user. In my experience it has been perfectly stable and simple, except for some random boot time kernel panics, but the potential for an inexperienced user to break an install without at least some core concepts of a package manager, especially with the AUR, is certainly there.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 2 points 11 months ago

TL;DR of the /home partition is this: One partition is gonna be the bootloader, typically a small /boot folder. This thing starts the booting process from efi, boot the kernel, this will mount the root partition (/). then, according to the File System TABle, typically a text file in /etc/fstab, you can mount whatever drives (and more!) Anywhere in the file system tree. A common setup is to partition your drive into a smallish / partition and a bigger /home partition. Under /home will be your /home/username folder, roughly the equivalent of C:\Users\username on windows, but even more of your install lives there now: any userspace application (usually a flatpak, which works crossdistro), ideally all user configuration, as well as of course your files. So, once you either need or want to switch distro, you leave the home partition untouched, format / and make a new user with the same username and home folder and bam, most if not all of your configuration and at least some of your apps will be there from the start You should probably do this, it's not too complicated and it may save the ou a headache in the future.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Used Sony 5 III was my play from the V30 and I'm honestly still kind of ambivalent about it. DAC not as good, 21:9 aspect ratio is just stupid. Great display, camera and size though.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

Exactly, I don't get how these people are supposed to be UI UX experts but don't understand that inconsistent behaviour is a very fast way to confuse and break user trust.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Returning Arch user (absent since 2008/9) here, using Plasma Wayland. Overall a positive experience but there's lots of little finicky things to setup, and I haven't tried using linux-zen like in my EndeavorOS work laptop, I imagine that's a bit more finicky with DKMS.

Nothing out of the ordinary for Arch thus far though, just manual configuration.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

This is one of the few things I really like about JS/TS. for (thing of things) is very legible and self documenting.

[-] FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 year ago

just make sure to never put it in ur anium.

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FalseDiamond

joined 1 year ago