I see. Markdown badly needs a good standard, doesn’t it.
I see. Markdown badly needs a good standard, doesn’t it.
I see! Thanks, will try to back up my docker compose services this way.
Can you elaborate on how your backup script re-deploys on new hardware? Sounds very nice to have.
I don’t understand why there isn’t a “markdown library” of some sort that software developers can just use in their app. I haven’t looked too deep into this, but it has always seemed to me that every app must individually implement markdown display. Why?
Holy removed, Photon has gotten this good now? When I tried it a few months back it felt like just yet another Lemmy client. Now it feels so smooth and polished. Works great on mobile even. Thanks for making this!
Thanks! I might use that, since I do already have Nginx Proxy Manager set up.
I want to learn stenography, but haven’t really got to buying a keyboard designed for it. I also want to host an EteSync server, but the HTTPS thing has been a bit of a headache for me and I’ve mostly just left it sitting there.
Why are you being downvoted? Is it not obvious enough that your comment was sarcasm?
AAAAXY. It’s a really nerdy game where you are in a non-euclidian (escherian) space. I’ve already poured more than 30 hours into this game. It’s available on Linux as a Flatpak (recommended if you don’t know which to choose), an AppImage, or a native binary. https://divverent.github.io/aaaaxy (ps. it’s open-source)
I’ve been using Wayland for 2 years. It was enabled by default when I installed openSUSE Tumbleweed with Gnome.
#sidebar-box[sidebarcommand="treestyletab_piro_sakura_ne_jp-sidebar-action"] #sidebar-header {
display: none;
}
Add this to your userChrome.css file to hide the “Tree Style Tab” header at the top of the sidebar.
This text sounds… ChatGPT-ish. Especially the last paragraph.
openSUSE Tumbleweed, because real life got a little too much and I wanted something that just worked.
I love that I can now type tabs on the MessagEase layout! Thanks!
Awesome!
Looks like someone also watched By Default’s video?
I’m not sure if 1 year of using Tumbleweed makes me a long time user, but here goes.
From my prior multiple years of experience with Manjaro and EndeavourOS, I must say that nothing beats the AUR. I sometimes run into softwares that are not on the openSUSE repos. If this happens, I try looking it on Flatpak. If it’s not available on Flatpak either I go search for the version that kind people have packaged for openSUSE. These 3rd party repos are kind of like PPAs on Debian(-based distros). If still no, I try looking for the .rpm made for Fedora or the AppImage version provided on the software’s sites, but this solution is less than ideal since it does not update automatically and the .rpms sometimes do not work. That is the main con of openSUSE. Other than that, I would say that there are no more major advantages or disadvantages to using openSUSE over Arch-based ones. A minor advantage is that things feel more polished on openSUSE.
I hope this was not too intimidating. Softwares available neither on the openSUSE repos, on Flatpak, on 3rd party repos, in RPMs, or in AppImages are rare. Still, openSUSE Tumbleweed remains my favorite distro and I urge you to give it a try.
Edit: I forgot another major thing about openSUSE. It uses BTRFS by default, and handles system backups for you. Fortunately, I haven’t needed to use this yet, but it is a really nice feature.
Yeah I still remember his fediverse direct messaging platform. Haven’t heard about it since he announced it.
Maybe he’s just too busy?