New messages (under an hour I think) are highlighted yellow.
New messages (under an hour I think) are highlighted yellow.
Not sure if I’m doing something wrong, have an incorrect setting, or if this is expected behavior, but the thing that’s been driving me nuts is when I go to share a link it always copies the source of the post for the lemmy link.
If, for example, I’m browsing on lemmy.ml and I want to share a post from lemmy.world, I’d like to be able to copy the lemmy.ml version of the lemmy.world post.
It doesn’t make as much sense with public instances, but when you’re using a private instance and you want to share with friends and family it can be kind of a hassle to retrieve the URL for said private instance.
The move to a subscription model is the disservice and requires no particular savvy to differentiate from free.
Macs and Chromebooks are fine for some people and won’t require as much hand holding as a direct Linux install regardless of the distro.
People are going to rely on what others recommend when they don’t know themselves. It’s up to those people to cull the list from ten to two.
Is the person a budding tech that wants to hack on their system? Send them to Arch.
Are they a creative looking to craft? Throw them into Ubuntu Studios.
Maybe they’re grandparents who barely understand tech. Ok, Mint or Elementary are good options… Just maintain SSH access with keys.
The options are a strength.
Your money, spend it how you want. Me, I’ll eschew the bloated system designed to separate customers from their money in favor of the free and open source alternatives.
Different date format: day / month / year; as opposed to the US standard: month / day / year.
That’s awesome, I wasted so much time on the web browser before playing over ssh and wasting even more time. Shame the drops didn’t seem to speed up.
I bought a Toto HW300-W “Portable Travel Washlet” off Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008O1G4LQ) back in 2018 and it still runs like a champ. The text is all in Japanese, but easy enough to figure out (or Google Lens it if you really want to know).
* Edit: I should note that I paid about half of the current list price :-O
American here. Thanks to woot regularly selling them, I have a bidet on each toilet in the house. I have a battery operated travel bidet, because now I’m hooked.
It has certainly led to… “Interesting” responses from house guests. There’s always TP in stock, so it’s not required. Butt I’m never going back if I can help it.
You make valid points, however, I’d like to point out that most games on the play store don’t cost a lot because the real costly transactions are in-app purchases. It’s common, in my experience, for the popular free apps to have IAPs upwards of $100 for in-game currency.
There’s also that matter of the no-cost version of the app. It seems perfectly usable, making the ad-removal an optional purchase.
Considering the smaller user-base and the finite economic value of life-time purchases I’d say $20 is fair. But that’s my stated opinion and I have yet to put my money where my mouth is.
Kelvin starts at absolute zero and proceeds on the Celsius scale.
Rankine starts at absolute zero and proceeds on the Fahrenheit scale.
And where does poor Rankine sit?
+1 for Joplin with Nextcloud / WebDAV sync.
Another +1 for Joplin. Been using it for a while now. The web clipper is very handy too.
Sync FTW
I was going to go with Shit creek.
I’d be inclined to agree… But I’ve had conversations like these, if not publicly.
This one about not being able to find a machine (http://bash.org/?5273) is relatable if you’ve ever had to trace cable in a rat’s nest of a server closet.
These are old IRC chats, a kind of Hall of Shame for public conversations… before social media really perfected the art.
oh? When I run lsblk
all of the docker overlay mounts are omitted. It does show loop devices, but otherwise it was the list of physical devices.
Looking at the man page it looks like df
lets you exclude types too: df -h -x tmpfs -x overlay
.
Same. I end up either grep -v -e
tmps and loop mounts or mount -t
for each type of physical mount. I suppose lsblk and findmnt might have better options and views.
+1 for Joplin (https://joplinapp.org/) with Nextcloud / WebDAV for sync. I use the web clipper all the time.