I like to put mine in /var/local/movies
etc. to keep the root standard and uncluttered.
Of course it's just personal preference
Where's the source code? Seriously, the only thing I can find for drive & calander are repos that were archived in 2021
I think that it's definitely a good case for overlaying with install
. They say to use it sparingly because it increases the chances of something breaking, but that doesn't mean it will. Something like a VPN usually needs liw level access that container isolation makes difficult.
I've only had 1 issue on silverblue years ago where I couldn't update because I had vim overlayed and they fixed it within a day or two.
So it's windows emulating linux emulating android emulating linux?
I'm interested to hear how that works out for you
You can set up multiple remotes for a repo and push to a local git server and github at the same time
I was too dumb too link it lol
Damn, I thought this was self hosted
Try running docker logs
for the tailscale container to see if it gives any more info
Bash is my login shell, but I have fish set as the default shell for alacritty
For anyone thinking about conducting a similar search for this image.
Turn on safe search before you search "flesh prison"
I'm done internetting for today
If you're making backups of things you care about and not running sudo rm -rf
the command isn't really dangerous.
But +1 for having it in /tmp
I have a bash function I call tempd that is basically cd $(mktemp -d)
I use it so much for stuff I dont really care to keep.
I had never heard of radxa. Looks awesome!
You don't even have to attack conciousness. Their argument is "I have property 'A'. I am human. Therefore all humans have property 'A'"
It's pretty shit lol
Tailscale keeps the private keys locally, . It just facillitates setting up wireguard. They could steal your private keys, as could any program you install with root access. But it would comepletely destroy their business, and it's open source. I really dont think they have anything to gain by tricking everyone
That's really weird. I set up a test system and I couldnt reproduce. The only thing I noticed errors flooding dmesg about elogind already running when I enabled it following the docs. I guess sddm is already starting it?
I dont see how that would cause your issue though. I would probably just reinstall lol
If you CTRL-ALT-F3 and login to a non graphical session does everything work as intended?
I'm just gonna leave this here
Did anybody think that they did?
I always assumed they were just easier to set up
It also depends on the viewer. I remember using prctl()
in C to chamge a process name and top showed my change but htop didn't. I'm sure a competent malware writer would be able to trick it though
Have you tried taking the metwork config out of the compose file and just letting podman handle it?
(Almost Solved?) Firefox flatpak started taking 3+ minutes to start?
Edit:
I turned off my wifi card, and now it launches immediately. Of course, what is a browser with no internet. But I guess there's something about the network I moved to thats causing the delay. I'll try a different network tomorrow and update for science
OG post: This applies to librewolf and firefox flatpaks. Just to preface, I've been using these flatpaks for years and never experienced anything like this.
This morning I did my business as normal with no issues. I usually open and close firefox alot and it takes maybe 10-30 seconds to start.
Then I shutdown for awhile. Came back and fired up firefox... nothing happened. The process is not using any cpu, it just sits. I kill the process and try again nothing changes. After 3-5 minutes, the window finally pops up.
My system installation of firefox works fine. So does the flatpaks for qutebrowser and tor browser. I ran flatpak repair
and reinstalled them. Nothing has changed.
I didn't make any changes to my system. There were no significant updates. I have no idea why this started.
If anybody has any tips on troubleshooting this, I would appreciate it.
Btw I'm on fedora39, and I've tested this on sway, gnome, hyprland, and gnome on xorg.