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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • Myself I have dual boot. For the sake of simplicity - let’s say I have 2 drives:

    1. 512GB NVME SSD - for OSes.
    2. 2TB SATA SSD - for games.

    512gb ssd partitioned into 2 parts - 256 for Linux and 256 for Windows.

    2TB ssd without partitions, but a plain BTRFS with zstd compression storage.

    Guess what - There is WinBTRFS driver. I am also sharing the same Steam library (on 2TB ssd) between both OSes… 😅 Works like a charm. 👌👌👌



  • It depends. Kind of prefer Flatpaks as they are always working as expected on any distro, but some of them are giving me just too much struggle.

    For example, dealing with sandboxing, or especially VSS code app. Yes, there are instructions, but then I install Golang SDK via Flatpaks the hard way (using CLI) for Go development, then having a nightmare trying to setup everything in vss code. Then how tf should I access go binary within my host terminal?

    On Arch Linux I just tend to install from official repos, while the rest of apps - from Flatpaks.

    Personally I don’t like the way they are sandboxed, bit as long as it works I am fine.


  • zikk_transport2@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlGood printers?
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    1 year ago

    HP

    You fucking what? 😂😂😂😂😂

    Seriously, there might be a debate of what printer company is better, but there is no debate which one is worst. It’s HP. 😅 They are so bad that they have no competitors of the worst fucking printer company. xD

    Myself I got Brother printer. Works like a charm, no bullshits. People on Reddit also highly recommend this brand too. Totally agree.


  • In the company I work, we have to use jumpbox + “password” from proprietary code generator.

    Imagine going through this, then you suddenly need 2nd terminal. Inconvenience doing it again in another terminal?

    Well, there is a solution:

    1. tmux
    2. CTRL+B then ". And now you have 2 terminals.

    Also tmux is great for “quick solution” kind of things - to leave something running in the background. Talking about background - you can have many terminals open, from only 1 SSH session. :)