See if there’s a way to disable power save for your audio driver module.
I had to do this for Intel for example
#/etc/modprobe.d/audio_disable_powersave.conf
options snd_hda_intel power_save=0
See if there’s a way to disable power save for your audio driver module.
I had to do this for Intel for example
#/etc/modprobe.d/audio_disable_powersave.conf
options snd_hda_intel power_save=0
Used to. Prefer Aquamail. I’m a thunderbird user on my workstation though. The latest changes were controversial, but it’s fine once you enable the system title bar and hide the menu bar.
Patents should simply be a monopoly on an idea for enough time to gather resources to develop that idea’s prototype. I know it doesn’t work that way, but it should. They really should be there for small inventors, not giant corps who have plenty of resources, but I digress.
But software itself can implement that prototype without having to build anything. Your ideas can be created directly. We don’t patent math and we don’t patent poetry or even poetic writing structures.
Software and business method patents are utter bullremoved.
removed software patents and business method patents. Patent the machine. Copyright the instructions to tell the machine what to do if you must.
You’ll also need umask for each user to be 002 for it to work transparently.
Mint integrates flatpak seemlessly into its graphic package management and update tools.
I would back up data (ie /home, /var, /etc) with Borg. If things break, just do a fresh install and restore data.
If a server, run it as a proxmox guest and snapshot the image on a schedule.
There are also things you could maybe do with ZFS.
I recommend Linux mint cinnamon.
I prefer doing useful things with my workstation vs playing with the OS itself, so mint cinnamon is my recommendation. Servers are ansible-managed alma. Professionally I’m a Linux systems architect and devops engineer.
Custom per-folder themes in Nemo with drag/drop templating like os/2 had. Extend to all apps, actually.
Each individual package is also signed.
Make sure that power saving is disabled.
Start with lynis and go from there. Also lsof -ni
and disable things that you don’t need.
Lynis will help you to comply with cis benchmarks, which are another thing you should read through.
Mint has simplescan. Did you try that?
Cinnamon actually lets you do some neat tiling with the keyboard. For example full height left key followed by full width top key will put a window in the top left corner. Same for any position. Run the sequence again to revert. I just discovered double clicks on borders will maximize vertical or horizontal as well.
Try using a timer