![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/d6eed5fa-622f-40d2-b656-324b5ff9fba2.png)
![](https://lemy.lol/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fhexbear.net%2Fpictrs%2Fimage%2F656a9f41-6cec-4f31-a510-ab0e1b24d40f.png)
Hell yeah.
But I second the “get some tools” sentiment.
Hell yeah.
But I second the “get some tools” sentiment.
Politically acceptable technical ‘solutions’
Come on man this whistle woke my cremated dog up
I had only used kde once before like 7 years ago and I wasn’t a huge fan. I wanted to try it again and I honestly really like it over gnome. I usually go tiling but felt lazy with a new laptop. The trackpad gestures are really solid.
nmcli is quite nice actually. My only real issue with NM is keeping track of what it’s doing behind the scenes.
So I want and have ip forwarding, and I only want to make a firewall whitelist between two of the interfaces.
I’ve uninstalled iptables, nftables isn’t running, NM has the firewall backend disabled, and ip forwarding is on.
This should result in traffic moving between the interfaces, yet traffic is moving between two of the interfaces, and blocked between two of the interfaces. It just doesn’t make sense.
Thanks for the suggestion, but I’m using NM for managing the AP and managed connections, not so much the bare connecting to wifi things.
The only real alternative to NM in this situation is a handful of delicate config files for iwconfig and dnsmasq.
A lot of software wont be distributed with a PPA to add.
Additionally, debs are useful for offline installations, with apt you’re able to recursively download a package and all of it’s dependencies as deb files, then transfer those over to the offline machine and install in bulk.
That being said I’ve never had great luck with the software center, it’s always felt broken. I’ll typically just dpkg -I <pkg>
.
I liked the story of lost tech and the overall geoengineering effort run amok. I honestly enjoyed the game more than BotW which had weirdly similar vibes. The second one was feeling less coherent though, I haven’t finished it yet. I enjoy uncovering the mysteries, which means I don’t think I could replay it.
My last playthrough was a 10-luck character, which I somehow never did before.
I started the game, collected some explosives from the prisoners, then at level 2 ran my ass dodging and weaving around cazadors and death claws, slowing picking off some marauders with my dynamite sticks from on top of a hill. I continued sprinting all the way to new vegas at lvl3, collected as much garbage as I could to buy my way into the strip. Using the 10 luck, I cleared out every single casino at the blackjack tables until they kicked me out. Did a couple missions and at lvl 5 or 6 I Jumped into dead money and carefully threaded myself through the combat with my lucky crits, leveling up like 6 times, and then cleared out the Sierra Madre at the blackjack tables.
I exited, now the richest man in all of New Vegas, unwanted at every venue, and coming out of a luck driven fugue state, I needed to find something. I went to the cannibals and tormented them picking them off one at a time, glitched the quest, and left. I then executed Mr House to feel something and began wandering the wastes.
The greatest thrill of all was throwing myself far underleveled and under geared at harder and harder challenges.
That’s a big thing for tech jobs, especially with the relatively low security. If you’re not working you’re not learning, and if you’re not learning you’re behind the curve and seen as “less valuable”.
Especially with how specific job postings are, if you don’t have the right combination of experience, you’re worthless. So if you’re bored maintaining some ancient irrelevant stack, you’re worse off.
This is like the second terrible take I’ve seen from the iusearchlinux.fyi instance in a span of minutes holy shit.
What about the pedophiles story? where he had two young girls who were not his wards in a hotel room for some innocent reason
Hm if I was more familiar with Haskell and Wayland I’d jump in on that. I barely learned enough Haskell to configure my setup and I’ve been going all in on learning Rust in the recent months. I fear I may actually be too dumb for a fully functional language.
deleted by creator
Thanks for the recommendations! Niri is very interesting as a proof of concept.
Vivarium looks like its not very actively developed which is sorta sad. I’m going to need to do more research into what’s around. There’s a lot of toy projects out there but not as many mature offerings.
I like it. If you have a good group to play with its a fun PvE shooter. The overall mechanics were really thought out so almost everything feels good in the game.
Accidentally team killing is also practically a core mechanic so that’s a lot of fun. Its not like other games where its mostly the noob that team kills, no player no matter how skilled is free from an accidental TK. Makes a tk more funny than anything.
I was about to give hyprland a try to see what the wayland offerings were like but after I saw that thread yesterday, I think I’m just going to stick to the screen tearing beauty of xmonad.
I think I first installed linux some time around 2009. I’m only just now starting to contribute to libraries, unrelated to linux. Its such a cool feeling growing along side the open source movement.
Why doesn’t this content creator jump through even more impractical hoops to sooth me personally?
Like yeah, it sucks we’re stuck within the systems we’re in, but its not like he’s running an IPO to buy shares of SecondThoughtAI$.
My wife often knows when family members have passed days prior to receiving the news. She just gets this feeling of fear or relief depending on circumstances, specifically tied to the family member and sorta grieves in her own way until the news reaches her.
Sure it’s not materialist but I’ve seen it happen enough times that I’m not going to argue against it.
I think there was a tony hawk down hill game that made extensive use of them for leaning.