Just because a DE looks sparse doesn’t means it also uses less resources. In imagine KDE would actually run well as it doesn’t need all the bells it offers and is actually a well written performant DE.
Just because a DE looks sparse doesn’t means it also uses less resources. In imagine KDE would actually run well as it doesn’t need all the bells it offers and is actually a well written performant DE.
“It’s never lost data for me. Yet” is what they mean.
I totally agree, the only file system I’ve lost data with as a result of a file system corruption not caused by hardware errors or power problems in 35 years has been btrfs. FAT even served me better.
But pulling the power on a btrfs drive at the wrong time results in you not even being able to mount it as read only. No snapshotting can help you there.
And yet here we are 16 years later with btrfs only just in a position to be usable (perhaps. My experience is that I’ll never use it again)
It cares so much that when it goes wrong you can’t even mount the partitions as readonly to try get your data back. It will stubbornly hold on to it and refuse any access at all. Boy I am so glad it didn’t let me access a potentially corrupted byte somewhere!
Try Shift+Insert. That’s my preferred pasting method in most scenarios.
Yay, there’s another Tilix user out there! Been a fan for a while and the tiling is great!
I dont think extra traffic to one website would be that significant and I dont think there are enough Steam Decks out there
If it helped significantly then either there are a lot fewer computer users that I thought, or your parents visit a LOT if websites.
I’m very excited for when it’s finally ready. It feels like a long wait, but I’m sure it’ll be worth it and there’s a lot to check to make sure it’s stable enough for prime time.
If it has gone from 3% to 4% that would mean there are 33% more linux users and just don’t see that as being true. That’s the kind of increase you would definitely notice if you’re the kind of person who hangs around linux haunts on the internet.
I use clonezilla at work for imaging and deploying laptops. It works like a charm. Great piece of software. It’s not normal backup software though.
I hope whoever thought -l
should mean “check links” instead of list has a special place in Hell set aside for them.
I have no idea what print a message if not all links are dumped
even means.
I imagine they use it in much the same way as any enterprise. Running servers and workstations, mostly.
F16’s run Kubenetes clusters.
Lots of individual bits of hardware on specialized devices will be running embedded operating systems. QNX is big in automotive for the same reasons it’d work on a rocket.