~/.local/bin
~/.local/bin
Brandon Sanderson is a machine. Nothing like the others
I would assume that’s something in the bios settings if it exists. But I could be wrong.
Maybe this: https://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?t=371122
Yeah, basically your DE will be the default of the distro. I’ve never had good luck with KDE above Centos 7. But I’m good with Gnome. I’m not saying it’s not possible, but it’s not worth my time and effort personally.
I used Rocky 9 at home for a while. I think I had an emergency with a disk and had to install fedora because it’s all I had. I also use Rocky 8 workstations at work without any problem.
I could easily slip back to Rocky over Fedora no problem. But I don’t game or do anything except serve ipa.
Edit: and yes these were/are my daily driver desktops.
some partitions are useful. Keeping /var and /tmp separate can stop DoS attacks by now allowing logs to fill the entire drive /home means you can wipe the / partition and keep user data.
Could also be going to sleep for power saving.
There is a secret command you can do to setup without Internet. But they hide it on the startup command line.
On the “Oops, you’ve lost internet connection” or “Let’s connect you to a network” page, use the “Shift + F10” keyboard shortcut.
In Command Prompt, type the OOBE\BYPASSNRO command to bypass network requirements on Windows 11 and press Enter.
Easily, I went from through several gen of pi and now run it on docker on my Synology.
As mentioned, it’s just a DNS server (at its core) and can actually make things faster as you will no longer download ads.
There are some getting used to things. Some url shorteners (constant contact) don’t work and sponsored Google search results won’t work. But the QOL is worth it.
no network connection