Doesn’t accelerating give you less time to prepare?
Doesn’t accelerating give you less time to prepare?
I too think that it would be better for everyone if the USA was cut off from technology.
Another point for KDE might be that it works much better on a small screen that may be partially obscured by an overlaid keyboard. I used Bazzite Gnome for a while on the Steam Deck and I much preferred Plasma on there after switching back, despite using Gnome on my main system.
It’s not namecalling, it is a term that gets used and that Rochko talked about himself in an interview. There’s a footnote.
I have a faint memory of once uninstalling python2 on an Ubuntu system trying to switch to python3. That was a fun learning moment.
I would suggest right-click in the folder in your file explorer -> open in terminal -> sudo nano
autocomplete file name (tab tab). At least to me that doesn’t seem that much more involved and is safer.
Otherwise, as others have noted, there are apparently ways of doing what you want, but it is discouraged for good reasons.
Not necessarily a satisfactory solution for you, but the usual way to handle that is just using a text editor in the shell with sudo, like nano or vim. It’s pretty fast and easy once you get used to it. I don’t know if there are any good graphical ways of doing it.
It is rare that you would want to run an entire GUI program as root, and if it is needed, the program should prompt you for it. Do you have a specific use case where you need to do that regularly?
I’ve been running it on my steam deck (LCD) for a while and it’s great. Nearly undistinguishable from SteamOS but with neat extras. If I had an AMD GPU in my gaming PC, I’d try it out there as well to see how the SteamOS experience holds up on a desktop.
removed Pocket with your AI dick Mozilla, just leave me a toggle in about:config to turn it off or I’ll find a fork that has none of that removed.
I think you might enjoy Librewolf
Immutable systems are useful for separating the system and application layers and to enable clean and easy rollbacks. On servers the applications are often already separated anyway through the use of container technologies. So having atomic system updates could enable faster and less risky security patching without changing anything about how applications are handled.
I recommend rather spinning up a VM to try it out first.
Well at least I’m not here perpetuating the delusion that desktop Linux desktop is as user-friendly and productive for every use-case as Windows and macOS are.
Wait, are you saying Windows and macOS are user-friendly and productive for every use-case? That’s hilarious!
I don’t have a Framework laptop, but I’d assume that the storage expansion modules are seen as regular USB external drives. So if your BIOS has USB as the first priority boot option, it would boot whatever system is installed on there when it is plugged in, and boot the system on the internal storage when it isn’t. I have a setup like that on my laptop with a WindowsToGo installation on an external SSD.
I tried that, but neither option seems to work. At least not in Wayland programs, like Firefox. It works in Chromium because iirc that runs in Xwayland. That doesn’t solve my issue with Wayland though.
For sure. I just meant that it’s just putting in a command and waiting for a bit, so I could understand doing it on a whim more than if it was a full reinstall. Doesn’t make any sense but it’s also not a big deal.
As an enduser my only noticeable issue with Wayland is that Auto-Type with KeepassXC doesn’t work.
Tbf I think it’s very easy to rebase a Fedora Silverblue install to ublue or vice versa
I mean, it’s the main way of installing software in immutable Fedora distributions, so it would be very surprising if it wasn’t preinstalled.
If you want just a replacement for Warpinator, LocalSend is definitely the way to go. I used Warpinator before, and LocalSend is just an overall better version of the same thing imo. Finds other devices instantly, can also send text in addition to files and folders, and is available across platforms.