But how are you going to know whether it’s never, once or 10,000 times without math?
I work in I.T. and am interested in every sub-field. I also study English, Spanish, German, French, Koine Greek, Latin, Mandarin & Swahili. I’m interested in human culture.
I like Linux, but mainly use Windows because of work.
But how are you going to know whether it’s never, once or 10,000 times without math?
I opened the link just to make sure. Yes, that is the entire “article”. There are 3 links below it to pay them.
It brought up the Spanish version of IMDB for me. The name of the movie in Spanish is “Los fantasmas atacan el jefe” The ghosts attack the boss. That seems like a good take on the original.
I’m copying my comment from an earlier thread on the same subject.
Tl:Dr If you want to be less hated, make a good product.
I was asked to set up an HP printer earlier this week. It was connected by a USB cable. It stopped printing after a few pages.
HP wants the end user to download their app to use the printer. The printer also has to be set up using an Ethernet or Wi-Fi connection. I’d already tried to connect it to Wi-Fi using the button on the printer, but it just said “Er” & blinked some other lights. The HP website specifically says that the printer cannot be used with just a USB cable.
I was confident I could have got it to connect to Wi-Fi and downloaded the app, but it was too much of a problem just to be able to print.
I had a Brother printer moved into its place. There haven’t been any other printing issues.
Reboot and see if it still happens. If it does, is it always the same characters that are missing?
A quick search for “Linux missing characters” says it could be the font that you’re using.
If you could mount it with the mount command, the drive is likely physically fine. My guess would be that something in PopOS didn’t mount the filesystem correctly. I’m not sure how PopOS handles automatically mounting drives. If it were a drive that was always connected, you could tell PopOS to mount it on every boot by putting the correct line in /etc/fstab
For my public-facing server, I use Debian Testing, since I haven’t had any major issues with it’s stability. Auto-upgrades usually work , although there were a few times I had to manually intervene on the latest name-change upgrade from Bookworm to Trixie. I usually don’t even log-in except every few months.
At home, where it will only affect me, and possibly my family dealing with me, if the whole O. S. crashes and has to be rebuilt from backups, I use Arch.
I’ll bet one of the exceptions is having a bunch of money.