Using this with Steam to prevent games from updating.
Using this with Steam to prevent games from updating.
For Gnome there is GSconnect available.
Is coreboot doing something like this?
Please make sure it doesn’t contain any bugs which can be exploited.
I work in a big international company. We regularly have phishing (email) awareness training. But they outsource about everything and regularly change the providers. So we often get totally legit emails from just some random companies and are supposed to visit/ login to some previously unknown domains.
The amd_gpio line is a bug to ignore, the message has the wrong priority and should only be written to the log file.
Not anymore. I don’t even bother to check steamdb, games run anyhow flawlessly under Proton experimental.
(OK, maybe check if the game runs well before buying it)
Try to mount the partition from the live system and copy the data to a safe place. Then reinstall.
No one mentioned ACLs so far. If you see a + using ls -l like this drwxrwx---+
, you have an access control list entry.
Hey, I justed a posted a similar experience, before I saw your post. I was able to recover my install and it is running well now. But man that was tense.
I am, currently still using LVM (logical volume manager) with LUKS (harddisk encryption) under Ubuntu. Running low on space, my idea was to add an additional NVMe and add the space to the existing logical volume. Now, I think I did nothing wrong and there is really a bug somewhere in the creation of the initial ramdisc. Fact was it would not decrypt the new drive and I was now basically missing half of the / volume. To fix the initrd, I had to boot from the life-system and manually unlock, discover and mount the various physical and logical volumes. I finally managed to changeroot into the system so I could rebuild the initrd. All this action was something of the most complicated I had to do with Linux. After rebooting and praying everything worked as it should have from the start.
There is an Flatpack called FlatSweep on Flathub.
Sorry, but the keepassxc extension works flawlessly.
No, it is a bug (I think) because GRUB should display in native resolution and because of a bug can’t figure it out and displays in 800x600. It is however only cosmetic.
As it boots fine (and changing into wayland later) I think you can just ignore it.
Edit: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/grub2/+bug/2012181
Maybe not the most loved, but most used software: Steam.
For Android there is TimeLimit.io which is open spurce and in the F-Droid store.