Have a ZOWIE EC2 for quite a while now:
- gaming mouse, 5 buttons
- USB compliant
- no special vendor drivers needed to use all mouse features (has buttons on bottom side for settings)
Works well on all OS.
Have a ZOWIE EC2 for quite a while now:
Works well on all OS.
Same here! Been using manjaro for more than 5 years by now on all my dev machines and I really like not being overrun by updates.
Once you form the habit of checking latest “stable update” forum thread (the eqivalent of checking the arch frontpage before an upgrade) and check for potential “manual interventions” (if any), then it gives you suprisingly good stability. But it’s still rolling release and “pretty current”.
And stability simply becomes more of a factor once your metaphorical “plate” becomes choke full and the last thing you want from your underlying OS is to act up on its own due to an update.
IMO (neo)VIM is great for writing text as well, when all you need is markdown level formatting. Personally I use vimwiki a lot (many years by now).
Yeah, that browser zoom. And I too used / use Firefox. I’m not saying these kind of sites are common, but nevertheless I’ve encountered them occasionally. Back then, the most pragmatic workaround was to use desktop zooming of Xfce.
My intention on the previous comment was simply to give some examples of desktop zooming that go beyond the typical accessibility viewpoint (e.g. vision impairment).
That’s why regular backups are advisable.
Yeah, AFAIR, the issue of “windows messing up grub” could happen when it’s installed on the same disk (e.g. on a laptop with one disk). Something about it overwriting the “MBR sector”. At least that was a problem back before UEFI.
I too have been dual booting Windows 10 and Linux for many years now, each having their own physical disk, Linux one always being first in boot order. Not once did a Windows 10 update mess up grub for me with this setup.
Not the same as “on demand zooming”, which let’s one stick with a high, native resolution, but zoom in when required (e.g. websites with small text that can’t be zoomed via browser’s font size increase; e.g. referencing some UI stuff during UI design, without having to take a screenshot and pasting + zooming it in e.g. GIMP).
Honestly, if all you’ve ever experienced in regards to terminals is windows CMD, then you really haven’t seen much. I mean that possitively. Actually, it will give you a far worse impression on what using a Linux / Unix terminal can be like (speaking as someone who spent what feel’s like years in terminals, of which the least amount in windows CMD).
I suggest to simply play around with a Linux terminal (e.g. install VirtualBox,.then use it to install e.g. Ubuntu, then follow some simple random “Linux terminal beginner tutorial” you can find online).
One takeaway from this surely is that such deeply nested endeavours sure are easily missed.
I do wonder if there’s a hard limit at some point regarding “nested replies”…
Nice, bit over half way point here.
I see, somehow completely forgot that apps might be different. In browser version in landscape (I just noticed) there’s also the right sidebar, which reserves some space. So it wouldn’t even have to go all the way.
I hope we’re all talking about portrait orientation. Oh boy, filling it up in landscape mode seems a daunting task. °!°
Alright, looks like 40% filled up on my screen atm.
Oh, it’s still going!
Nah, one is enough. ^^ Curiosity got the better of me thinking about how squished the UI might end up looking.
Let the streak continue…
Great read, certainly had more relatable things in there than I’d expected.
Yeah, such a simple, but still killer feature. Really sad that JSON doesn’t support them.
Somewhat recently I caused a failed kernel update by accident:
Ran system update in tmux session (local session on desktop). But problem was that tmux itself got also updated, which crashed the tmux session and as a result crashed the kernel update. Only realized it upon the following reboot (which no longer worked).
Your described solution re “live ISO, chroot, run system update once more, reboot” was also what got me out of that situation. So certainly something worth learning for “general troubleshooting” purposes re system updates.