

Honestly, it always goes back to the seven deadly sins. In this case, I’d say greed and gluttony are most relevant.
Honestly, it always goes back to the seven deadly sins. In this case, I’d say greed and gluttony are most relevant.
Like @pathos said, that’s the list from the previous step. Because you’re autoremoving, it will only remove packages that aren’t dependencies of any other packages still installed.
For anyone reading this on a Debian-based system, you can get a good start without risking removing anything important like this:
apt-mark showmanual
, and copy any package names you don’t think you need into a list.apt-mark auto <pkg1> <pkg2> ...
apt autoremove
Just install the Auto Tab Discard extension. After a certain amount of time it will replace your loaded tab with a (RAM-free) placeholder that reloads when you click it again. Me, my ADHD brain, and my 500 tabs can be at peace now.
I use FlorisBoard, and I don’t remember having any issues. I’ve only used KDE remote a couple times though, so ymmv.
Small but crucial correction:
Ghibli filter trend is just people hiding how ugly they feel.
I might also say trying to hide instead. It’s usually not hard to tell when it comes from insecurity.
KDE Neon on desktop. I want to be on the latest Wayland I can for feature support (and Waydroid), without being on the bleeding edge for stability, and it checks all those boxes. Based on Ubuntu LTS, with latest Wayland and KDE software.
For my home servers I like to try out different distros. I have a thin client on openSUSE Tumbleweed running Portainer, a couple Armbian SBCs for reverse proxies, my main Unraid storage server, and a thin client running NixOS at my parents’ house for backup storage and remote troubleshooting access.
Eh, I’m not sure if the world can be picked backup, it’s been knocked down pretty hard. I’m always down for trying though.
/apr1
I feel like this is screaming for proper PID controller logic. I like this one, installable from HACS.
For desktop, I’ve liked Lato, Source Sans Pro, and Inter to name three.
For terminal, I used Iosevka’s customizer to create a gorgeous Fira Mono-like variant that I call Iosevka Firesque:
[buildPlans.IosevkaFiresque]
family = "Iosevka Firesque"
spacing = "term"
serifs = "sans"
noCvSs = true
exportGlyphNames = false
[buildPlans.IosevkaFiresque.variants]
inherits = "ss05"
[buildPlans.IosevkaFiresque.variants.design]
capital-g = "toothless-corner-serifless-hooked"
capital-q = "crossing-baseline"
g = "single-storey-serifed"
long-s = "bent-hook-tailed"
cyrl-a = "single-storey-earless-corner-serifed"
cyrl-ve = "standard-interrupted-serifless"
cyrl-capital-ze = "unilateral-serifed"
cyrl-ze = "unilateral-serifed"
cyrl-capital-en = "top-left-bottom-right-serifed"
cyrl-en = "top-left-bottom-right-serifed"
cyrl-capital-er = "open-serifless"
cyrl-er = "earless-corner-serifless"
cyrl-capital-u = "cursive-flat-hook-serifless"
cyrl-u = "curly-motion-serifed"
cyrl-capital-e = "unilateral-bottom-serifed"
cyrl-e = "unilateral-bottom-serifed"
brace = "straight"
ampersand = "upper-open"
at = "threefold"
cent = "open"
Pizza bagels are pretty good, just toast a bagel, add sauce & pepperoni (and cheese if you want), warm it a bit more in the microwave.
Pepperoni in scrambled eggs is also ridiculously tasty, even more so on a warm croissant with a slice of melty provolone or havarti. Mmmm…
Fwiw, you can change the shortcuts for nano in your ~/.nanorc
. Most of mine are the same as standard desktop editors, except undo is Ctrl+U because Ctrl+Z is commonly bound to suspend, and quit is Alt+Q instead of Ctrl+Q because in browser window terminals (e.g. Unraid) Ctrl+Q usually closes the whole browser (oof).
Just measure it as a percentage of their market cap/gross profit (yes gross, not net) rather than an absolute dollar amount, problem solved.
You can change that in the nanorc
along with changing key binds, colors, and the like.
To be fair, you can easily rebind all the keys to be more normal by adding a .nanorc
. Though, Ctrl-Z conflicts with suspend in many terminals, so I keep that one as Ctrl-U. A .nanorc
also allows turning on mouse support, changing the color scheme, etc.
Except in very rare configurations (i.e. not 99.9% of residential), you do not want to have multiple paths to ground within a system. All grounds should go to the tied ground/neutral bus in the main breaker panel, which then goes to earth via a ground rod or a clamp to a copper gas/water line, etc. Otherwise you can have current flowing in ways that the system isn’t designed for, which at the least can trip breakers and GFCIs, and at worst exceed the rating of the wires in a short condition and cause a fire.
Except in very rare configurations (i.e. not 99.9% of residential), you do not want to have multiple paths to ground within a system. All grounds should go to the tied ground/neutral bus in the main breaker panel, which then goes to earth via a ground rod or a clamp to a copper gas/water line, etc. Otherwise you can have current flowing in ways that the system isn’t designed for, which at the least can trip breakers and GFCIs, and at worst exceed the rating of the wires in a short condition and cause a fire.
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Seems more accurate anyway, it’s not like the concept of recycling even exists digitally. I understand why Windows did it way back when to raise awareness of recycling, but nowadays it’s just a bit silly.