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Cake day: August 22nd, 2023

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  • I basically gave up on podcasts on the desktop and only use AntennaPod on my phone. When I’m at my desktop, I have my phone paired with my computer via Bluetooth and play that way. I can pause it on my computer via KDE Connect (GSConnect on GNOME).

    Bluetooth audio from phone to desktop works on Fedora Linux quite well. It probably works on other Linux distros too. I’m guessing it might also work on other OSes like Windows and macOS.

    KDE Connect is available on Android, iOS, KDE (and can run on other desktops too), GNOME (via the GSConnect extension), Windows, and macOS.

    This solves the syncing problem by sidestepping the need for it. My podcast state is always correct and I always have my podcasts with me, even when out and about.



  • You can set up mount points on Linux, at least in GNOME, very easily. (It’s even fully automatic for external disks.) I’d be surprised if it isn’t as easy in KDE and other desktops too.

    The problem here (at least from what it sounds like) isn’t setting up mount points. The problem is fixing an incorrect fstab on the disk that’s causing the system to hang on boot.

    (This isn’t a typical situation, which is why I also asked about how the partition was added to the system.)



  • My first attempt to try to fix something like this would be to:

    1. Download Fedora Workstation live media. (Within Windows or some other computer that boots.)
    2. Flash it to a USB stick.
    3. Reboot to the live desktop from the USB stick. (It might require pressing F12 or some other key combo during boot.)
    4. “Try out” Fedora. (That is: do not install.)
    5. Open GNOME Disks. (I think it’s included. Otherwise, you can sudo dnf install gnome-disks to install it temporarily on the live session.)
    6. Try to mount the main filesystem that contains /etc/fstab (it should ask you for the LUKS password.
    7. Comment out the Windows mount point. Or if you want to keep it (if the partition still exists and is just “dirty” and still needs a check from Windows) add “,nofail” after “auto” to the options in the line for the mount, so your system should still boot without that mount point.
    8. Save the /etc/fstab file.
    9. Shut down the computer.
    10. Unplug USB stick.
    11. Boot computer. Linux should successfully boot… hopefully. 😉

    I’m also wondering: How did you add the Windows partition to Fedora? Was it from within Fedora’s installer (aka: “Anaconda”)? Or did you add it in a different way?

    (BTW: I use Silverblue and have a long history with Fedora. 😁)