GNOME does have that. Meta + right click anywhere in the window will bring up a menu for window operations.
GNOME does have that. Meta + right click anywhere in the window will bring up a menu for window operations.
Why wouldn’t it? Lots of languages do. In C++ you have __LINE__
.
Removed by mod
Why are you using networkd instead of networkmanager on a desktop? The two don’t work together.
Anyway, it looks like a DNS problem. You can manually specify DNS servers (like 8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4) in whatever network management you’re using.
Alternatively you can edit (I meant /etc/hosts
/etc/resolv.conf
obviously) and then make it immutable (chattr +i /etc/hosts
) to prevent changes.
I hope you get the help you need Drew.
The part where he has been obsessively trying to depose a saintly old man with cancer by misinterpreting stuff he’s written and one thing he allegedly (no proof) said in the 80s. Then he posted in the HN thread praising the report and claimed not to have written it, and fled back to mastodon when it was discovered that he did write it. Then he marked everyone’s post that questioned him as a death thread.
And that was just Tuesday.
Keep in mind that sway is written by Drew Devault who is a mentally ill creep (eg https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41837782)
Caddy. The config and docs suck.
Eg. I thought I configured it to limit some sites to an allowlist of IPs. Turns out (months later) the config did nothing, but ran anyway.
Yes, in i3, sway, and hyprland with hy3.
What the shit
Our sprint at work has been going on for almost 900 days.
We don’t know.
While Windows doesn’t present the ability to read Linux filesystems to the user, that doesn’t mean that it can’t do it at all for some covert security state purpose.
There are host lists out there you can use, eg https://github.com/StevenBlack/hosts
tl;dr you append it to your OS hosts file. On Linux it’s /etc/hosts
NSA Uncovers Skynet’s Plan To Just Sit Back And Enjoy Extinction of Humanity
Seems to be real, unless the video is fake: https://youtu.be/rnWr1InNCgg?t=246
External enclosure connected via usb-c. It’s cheap and effective.
I did that and a Windows update nuked Linux from the BIOS boot loader a few weeks ago.
The only safe option is to have completely separate machines. Thankfully with the rise of ridiculously powerful minipcs that’s easier than ever.
Why don’t they reverse the axis on the “less if better” graphs so you don’t have to look at the note on every graph…
If you attract the attention of the authorities and you use a residential connection with multiple users, they will have a difficult time conclusively establishing who did what.
If you use a VPN it’s likely to be a lot easier (single user, paid with personal card, etc) and it looks like you’re trying to hide so the penalty may be higher.