𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪
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I did not, but of course you can. Either by using an adapter (maybe a printable one?), or – if it is an SSD – by just placing the drive there and hld it in place with one screw.
If there already is a drive installed you want to removed and there is no spare cover, you can also print one.
(You can of course buy the parts instead of printing them. Those adapters and covers are fully standardized and widely available.)
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Why does Signal want a phone number to register if it's supposedly privacy first?31·1 day agoIf I’m the target, then this is enough.
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Why does Signal want a phone number to register if it's supposedly privacy first?173·2 days agoBut your phone number is, and thus every agency can get your full name and address and location.
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Why does Signal want a phone number to register if it's supposedly privacy first?121·2 days agoSignal IS the middleman.
You could use
dd
to create full disk images. This maintains everything.
There’s ydotool.
Absolutely none. On my setup everything runs fine either natively or with Xwayland.
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto Games@lemmy.world•CD Projekt exec says "the right thing to do" is release a real Nintendo Switch 2 cartridge for Cyberpunk 2077, not a game-key card, in message to other studios: "Do not underestimate the physical editEnglish381·6 days agoDigital for things you consume. Physical for things you love.
I feel like nowadays it’s more specific web servers instead of a general purpose one. Also containerization often is a thing.
I wish you wouldn’t use GitHub but an open source forge, though.
You summarize it quite well. But I would still recommend Arch (but as an Arch user since 2008 I am biased on this). Why?
- Lightweight, ideal for gaming. My full-featured Wayland-setup with labwc runs with ca. 2 gigabytes of RAM, including Firefox, which on it’s own currently takes up 800 megabytes. Not that RAM would be an actual issue on modern gaming setups, but still, this shows how little resources the system needs for itself.
- Gaming on Linux is pretty much solved nowadays thanks to Valve (Steam, Proton, etc.) and Flatpaks. Games that do not work are intentionally made to not work on other platforms than Windows due the games using ring0 spyware as DRM and for anti-cheat.
- Privacy by concept – while there are no specific measures taken regarding privacy, the default installation just does nothing except initializing the hardware and allowing the user to sign in. Everything else is up to you.
- Software development is – like gaming – a no-brainer. All common tools work on Linux. Even more: Dependency handling, setting up the environment, using different compilers – all this feels much smoother than on Windows.
- Maintainability is great. Since there are no package changes from upstream, you can be sure that bugs are typically bugs in the software and not coming from Arch packaging.Thanks to rolling release you get much less updates at the same time compared to fixed release distribution – ganted you update regularly. I check the news and update every 1-2 weeks at the weekend.
And since you’re coming from Windows, you have to learn new stuff anyways. So why not dive head first into Arch?
You can create communities only on your own instance. For you that would be this link.
Do you get any error messages?
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto science@lemmy.world•AI Made Up a Science Term — Now It’s in 22 PapersEnglish79·23 days agoSo at least 22 papers from the study were AI generated and not checked afterwards.
This says more about
the authorsthe AI users who claim authorship than about AI.
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•Found a random family's old website from the early 2000's15·24 days agoI miss when websites were fun.
Why do you consider AppImages as last resort?
Mainly because you cannot manage them properly.
Installing from the repos I have pacman, from the AUR I can use one of the various AUR helpers (most of them can forward repo package updates to pacman, so I really have just one command to update the system and all AUR packages).
When making my own packages I usually also put them in the AUR (plus, it is super easy to do make an own package and put in in the AUR) – and from there an aUR helper takes care about updates. Flatpaks can also be updated very easy by just running one command.
So: All of those have a specific location where they install and allow me to start them easily because they put a script/link somewhere in
$PATH
. All of those can be easily maintained and updated.Last time I checked, AppImages had none of those. Neither could I easily update all of them on my system, nor is there a dedicated location to place them, nor is there an “unified” (i.e. something in
$PATH
) way of starting them. I have to manually check for updates, re-download the whole thing, replace the current AppImage file in an arbitrary location.This is just how I do not want to maintain my programs.
𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.mlto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Anyone try storing your farts in jars and inhaling them when you need them? What's it like?4·26 days agotldr: max 9 days if it’s really stinky.
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https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation#Finanzierung
Die Foundation hat mehrere 100 Million US-Dollar Vermögen (nicht Umsatz. Vermögen!)
Didn’t they move to Microsoft for hosting quite some time ago?