Mess with grub, without really understanding what you’re doing.
Also, “meep”.
Mess with grub, without really understanding what you’re doing.
Also, “meep”.
/ end of thread
What COM Port is your mouse on?
That question got me. SO glad we got past setting IRQs and setting up modems and dip switches and all that.
How about this?
The Cathedral and the Bazaar : Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary by Eric Raymond,
It’s from 1997 but addresses some of what you mentioned. Things have changed a lot since it was written though, so just keep that in mind.
Tuta (used to be called Tutanota), web and Android clients).
Because F++k Google.
Wow, what an odd coincidence.
Hi! I use a MS Xbox S wireless controller on Ubunut almost every day and it “just works” but your controller seems different.
It might help us to know:
Also, does this help at all?
https://github.com/medusalix/xone
xone is a Linux kernel driver for Xbox One and Xbox Series X|S accessories. It serves as a modern replacement for xpad, aiming to be compatible with Microsoft’s Game Input Protocol (GIP).
I love it. I do use it on mobile, in my browser too. I’ve been meaning too see what other clients are available for android.
You might like to search this community, and also \c\self_hosted, since this question gets asked a lot.
For me:
I created two things - CodeNotes (for snippets) and a lil’ Weather app myself 'cause I didn’t like what I found out there.
Tuta’s web client.
It gets the job done and I don’t use email much any more.
Yah, if a developer wants to call all/most of his users ‘idiots’, they should have someone else interact with users.
I’ll take care of the “What is this thing?” for you, OP.
Leap Micro is an ultra-reliable, lightweight operating system built for containerized and virtualized workloads.
Start planning what your next OS should be.
Oh neat! What comes after that?
As scientists, we know that transparency and peer review lead to better security.
What? App developers are scientists now?
I know this originally came from CERN, but I find it hard to believe those same folks are working on this now.
Proof?
“Everyone poops”?
You had me at TRS-80!
2 … Is there a GUI (I know) way to see all applications, where they’re installed from, with an easy remove button? Akin to what windows offers?
For a GUI option, with KDE, I can go into the Discover app store, and then click the “Installed” link in the lower-right.
For a CLI way to list all apps, I found this page which gives this command:
for app in /usr/share/applications/*.desktop ~/.local/share/applications/*.desktop; do app="${app##/*/}"; echo "${app::-8}"; done | sort
Have fun finding the best option for your system.
Lol, see the other comment here! :)