I too have used arch btw. Currently using pop (deb) tho. I hop around from time to time.
I too have used arch btw. Currently using pop (deb) tho. I hop around from time to time.
High background resource usage.
Perhaps ppl who keep their githubs anonymous simply tend to be more skilled. Older, more senior devs grew up in an era where social medias were anonymous. Younger, more junior devs grew up when social medias expect you to put your real name and face (Instagram, Snapchat, etc.).
More experienced devs are more likely to have their commits accepted than less experienced ones.
Damn, guess I go back to regular Firefox
Looks like this for me:
So yes, smth does seem to be missing.
experience?
Here’s an.instance of it if anyone is curious: https://lotide.exopla.net.eu.org/
spend 10-15 bucks on a switch tester pack
Op mentioned microcenter. If they have a microcenter nearby, they might have a switch tester pack you can test for free. That’s how I found what switches I liked best.
Went to my local microcenter’s keyboard section and asked an employee there if I could test out the different switches. They let me try a switch tester board.
Can you give a list of what media keys you want and would a volume knob work?
Yes, Linux doesn’t spy on you and let’s you do more customized stuff
They can know all of your children by buying that data from others. If one of your children is in middle school and one in elementary, they know which one is in the car by which location and time you picked them up.
If you regularly go to a soccer field after picking up the kid in middle school, they now know that that kid is interested in soccer. They can sell this data to advertising companies who will use it to show your family soccer ball ads, cleats ads, tickets to soccer games, etc.
As the other comment says, they can do a lot more than just location.
But even with just location, they can figure out where you work, what stores you visit, what protests you attend, what hobbies you have, who your friends and family are, and so much more. If you regularly drive someone else in your car, a child for example, they’ll also know all these things about them too.
So that’s where all trash on the roads of India come from
Silksong hopefully
Yeah sure that’s an epic, but it’s not meta. Half the common’s are more meta than that. Better luck next time, OP.
Side note: when linking to a community you have to do !community@instance. If you do !fediverse@kbin.social, it links to kbin.social’s fediverse community for everyone. If you just write !fediverse, that links to !fediverse@programming.dev for me, !fediverse@kbin.social for you and other kbin.social users, !fediverse@lemmy.world for lemmy.world users, etc.
You won’t have all the features of mastadon with a lemmy account, but here are some things that can happen.
Mastadon users can post to lemmy and kbin communities. You can reply to these posts and both lemmy and mastadon users will be able to see it. For the mastadon users, the comments look like replies on a mastadon thread.
Mastadon users can also comment on lemmy/kbin posts. You can reply to those comments, upvote/downvote them etc.
Mastadon users can follow lemmy and kbin communities. But lemmy users can’t follow mastadon users yet. Kbin users can follow mastadon users. The reason kbin is less popular than lemmy is because kbin lacks mobile apps.
Nix was my next plan lol. My last distro suddenly had some file system corruption problems mid week when I needed it, so I had to switch to something quick without much time for configuration. So I decided to go for a preconfigured distro.
My next plan is Nix when I have some time.
As for how I back stuff up for frequent distro hopping: Firefox login syncs my browser stuff and passwords, steam syncs my game save files, I backup my home folder to a USB once in a while so I don’t lose any local documents. I have private GitHub repos for some window manager, bar, etc configs I’ve made like sway, i3, polybar, awesomewm, etc., that I use when switching to more barebones distros.