Except it’s nearly always a 12 hour clock :/
Except it’s nearly always a 12 hour clock :/
Reminds me of the package “cmatrix”
It would be a car completely flat on the ground, made up of all it’s parts neatly spread out. A geek stands in the center of it all holding an electric screwdriver in one hand and a blow torch in the other wearing a welders mask.
LVM allows online resizing of volumes, and includes redundancy features such as snapshots and raid.
It’s used a lot more in services than laptops.
It’s been a while since a power cut affected my services, is this why?
I remember having to troubleshoot mysql corruption following abrupt power loss, is this no longer a thing?
What are these sizes from? All my Linux installs start with <20G root disks and end up with some spare.
And Windows at 72G? Whilst it’s more than Linux it’s not that much.
oops, showing my age I guess :/
My daughter read that as “kill your self”. :(
Does jellyfish not transcode on the fly?
Crazy. Thanks 👍
Yes. It’s a server feature to allow a “resume” request or not.
It’s like passing a bill called “protect the people” that has had an add-on that bans porn nationwide. It’s easy to blame the bill.
I’m not sure on your take of the link you posted but it quite clearly states the limitations placed on these extensions and how they can be rendered useless by the new rules.
How did people visit sites using ipv6 addresses before this? Ipv6 has been around for years. Seems like a slow pickup
With 8G oom killer will kill my Firefox process.
I was evaluating Linux desktop prior to switching my work pc to Linux with an 8G VM and it wasn’t enough for just browsing and general tinkering.
The kid is taking the photo
Sometimes the ability to resume a download is prevented by the server you are downloading from. The server needs to support the request to resume.
Can someone explain the benefits of LXD without the opinionated crap?
I’ve used Linux for decades but not for desktop usage. I work with Linux every day.
I recently purchased a high end workstation to act as a hypervisor for multiple desktop systems. The plan was to boot into a Linux system and then from there load up one of many desktop OS and work seamlessly within a VM. This has worked well on a Windows host with VMWare Workstation and allows me as a contractor to have separation of configuration between customers.
However I found Linux desktop to have too many glitches. From failed package installs, multiple monitor problems and some special keys being sent to both VM and host. I also found the user interface of some apps to be bad, which I can look past but with the other fundamental issues it added a bad taste to the experience. I really want it to work and I do go back every now and then to try again.