It depends. I got a new MasterCard debit card last week, and the numbers are on the front. Only the CVV is on the back.
Bun, meat, salad, tomato, onion, Cheddar.
It depends. I got a new MasterCard debit card last week, and the numbers are on the front. Only the CVV is on the back.
They are also still complaining about PulseAudio, despite Pipewire having mostly replaced it, while spending hours fiddling with ALSA to use their headphones.
The problem: incomprehensible init scripts
ActivityPub is the protocol powering the Fediverse. Platforms include Lemmy, Mastodon and Pixelfed.
It’s Linus Torvalds.
Actual doesn’t support multiple user accounts.
It’s missing a lot of features that Wayland “developers” (spec writers) don’t want to add because they personally don’t need them. For the few features they actually add, they leave it to WM developers to implement them, thus creating different incompatible implementations.
Are they also opposed to coreutils being a single project with dozens of executables doing different things?
Same. I use nVidia on Wayland, and experience more crashes and panics than when using the iGPU. With older versions of the driver, I could consistently trigger a crash when exiting an app which used the discrete GPU (such as Steam), or by switching between a game and Firefox.
$ poweroff
kernel panics for some reason
have to use the power switch anyway
Such is life when using Linux on a laptop.
So that’s why she died in the series!
Have Nintendo ever used GPL software?
Elementor has this feature, though.
have better support for multi-monitor
In my experience, it’s way worse than Xorg. With Wayland, I cannot turn off my laptop screen but keep the external display, and having both monitors on at once can cause crashes when GPU acceleration is needed (videos or games). Somehow this is nVidia’s fault, yet it works on Xorg with the same hardware.
Forgejo is a reactionary fork of Gitea, started because the creator of Gitea founded a company to maintain it.
Smartest systemd hater.
The Android app is garbage, often refuses to automatically synchronise, and for the past few releases has been displaying an error saying it can’t connect to the server even though it clearly can.
Nextcloud itself is okay but slow.
That is, until a new Ansible version breaks playbooks again, or an OS is updated in a way that messes with you playbooks, or a package is removed from the playbook but not the installed system…
Ansible is good for ephemeral containers or VMs, but any more permanent system will eventually deviate from the set configuration.
I second DokuWiki. It’s super lightweight and infinitely customizable with plugins.
I don’t. I find them hard to read.