It meant user, as in user-installed programs and libraries for this system over the core system programs and libraries of the operating system in /bin and /lib.
Someone learned it wrong, but otherwise I think the image is right.
It meant user, as in user-installed programs and libraries for this system over the core system programs and libraries of the operating system in /bin and /lib.
Someone learned it wrong, but otherwise I think the image is right.
It’s a great language, and I even like their deployment/packaging system.
But oh my god it assumes everything follows its rules, and does NOT play well with others.
We need a rust-based distribution, there can be only one.
That’s absolutely the opposite of what it says.
It says the states, specifically, must have armed citizens to prevent a tyrannical federal government:
. It is, therefore, with the most evident propriety, that the plan of the convention proposes to empower the Union "to provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, RESERVING TO THE STATES RESPECTIVELY THE APPOINTMENT OF THE OFFICERS, AND THE AUTHORITY OF TRAINING THE MILITIA ACCORDING TO THE DISCIPLINE PRESCRIBED BY CONGRESS.‘’
https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/fed29.asp
By keeping the army, or ‘militia’ under the sole control of the states, it guaranteed the states were never disarmed and could effectively resist or even attempt secession if they saw fit. Which, in fact, was later tried.
Until the 14th amendment incorporated the bill of rights, the 2nd amendment only applied to the federal government, and in fact strict gun laws and bans were common throughout the 18th century.
So, I’ve had it not work before, usually for odd reasons. One thing to try is to delete the other partition, then apply, then try to move it.
Resize/move is finicky though.
Right click, resize/move.
You need the number over time, and to confirm the same features are used, ie whatever Ray tracing or other effects.
This is hard to measure and confirm, could be more efficient, could be lower settings.
I applaud you investigating though!
Need to confirm the fps, it could be using less power because it’s receiving less work to do.
Shut it!
Disney is an absolute must if you have a kid, and a great value besides.
Otherwise it makes 0 sense except for maybe star wars sometimes.
SLES sales: “You really trust IBM not to bend you over? Yes, we accept Visa or Mastercard.”
They could just have a VPN detector, that’s harder to work around, sec.
Fascinating, I assumed roughly this behavior but I don’t think there’s much information about the futility of marketing because it threatens the jobs of marketers, any good sources?
Have an lxc config that enables glx on x11 in the container, spin one up and throw stuff in there, temp zfs volume.
Lxc-rm when done.
Disable location services.
The out-of-tree thing is annoying, but most distros have zfs support as modules already.
I’ve never had to worry about zfs recovery when it wasn’t a raid, it seems to be automatic, but you have zpool checkpoints, scrubs, snapshots, really a ton of ways to go back to a working state, and you can also try to recover bad files if you use the right techniques.
Look at zdb, it’s pretty intense.
Zfs, absolutely, because you can send the data where you need.
I disagree completely with btrfs, because if something goes wrong, that’s it, recovery is not pleasant. Zfs isn’t perfect, but it has recovery modes.
Alternately, ext4, it’s recoverable, safe, and with journaling it’s solid on power loss.
edit: Other poster was right about bitrot and checksumming, stick with zfs, xfs is good too so long as you’re not running a db.
Yeah, that’s my question, why is this a problem?!?!
“Good news! We’re giving you a cure for all the poison we’ve been putting in your food!”
Also debian used to have ancient packages, or broken ones in testing. Now stable is fairly up to date so Ubuntu lost its value, it was just a newer stable really.
This is new, debian used to be either way behind or broken for less popular packages, but that has completely reversed over the past decade, people just haven’t gotten over the perception yet.
It did, let me explain:
On the original (ie Thompson and Ritchie at Bell in 1969-71), I think it was a PDP-11, they installed to a 512kb hard disk.
As their “stuff” grew they needed to sprawl the OS to another drive, so they mounted it under /usr and threw OS components that didn’t fit.
https://landley.net/writing/unixpaths.pdf
I’ve done the same, outgrew so you mount under a tree to keep going, it just never became a historical artifact.