As long as the “No Thanks” button is a one and done go-away button, I think this is a decent idea!
I’m Elsie, 19 year old programmer! I’ve been programming since I was 9 years old when I got a Raspberry Pi.
As long as the “No Thanks” button is a one and done go-away button, I think this is a decent idea!
Rhino Linux! A rolling release Ubuntu distribution. It uses the Ubuntu devel repos + pacstall.
I learned bash instead of python because my 8 year old brain saw all the parentheses and thought “ew no”…
I also pick this man’s wife -_-
They are TTYs, they’re like terminals your computer spawns at boot time that you can use. Their intended purpose is really whatever you need them for. I use them for if I somehow mess up my display configuration and I need to access a terminal, but I can’t launch my DE/WM.
Ctrl+shift+V is what you should do. Ctrl+V is used by shells for I believe inserting characters without doing some sort of evaluation. I don’t remember the specifics though, but yes Ctrl+shift+V to paste.
The link you sent has a period at the end so it doesn’t work when clicked.
And your default shell is a POSIX compliant shell, usually dash or ash, so that’s what I mean by sh
. You can set it in ~/.config/alacritty/alacritty.toml
with:
[shell]
program = "/bin/sh"
Oh I think I know what you mean. Did you try setting your shell to something like sh
instead of bash or zsh and see if it was a shell startup issue?
What stability issues have you encountered?
I downloaded the Yuzu flatpak onto a USB stick and I’ll send a zip of it with install instructions if anyone wants it.
Sorta, the file might not be in the a.out format anymore but the name has stuck around.
From what I’ve heard they used some assembly code directly for very low level functions.
What do you mean by “plastering files around your fs”?
I have one and I forgot when I got it, it’s just that old and it has never failed me
It used to be spelt “coronnel” in Old French and we took that pronunciation, but then we also took the updated french word “colonel” but kept the old pronunciation.