It’s macbooks so they would be able to run real macos. Since you still chose to install something else, it must mean that this is somehow superior.
It’s macbooks so they would be able to run real macos. Since you still chose to install something else, it must mean that this is somehow superior.
If you can log in somehow and it manages to mount your encrypted home, you can investigate what files are using the disk space.
0 bytes free might be causing this, many things won’t work because they want to write something to disk. If logging in doesn’t work using the graphical interface, can you log in using a terminal? You can get to one by pressing crtl + alt + f1 on the login screen. If that works, you can try deleting some files and see if you can log in as usual again after rebooting.
JS is difficult to avoid. Brave is easy to avoid, just use another browser.
What’s easier in Windows compared to Linux? Except the fact that you have to install it, since it doesn’t come preinstalled on as many PCs. But many people who think Windows is easy would probably still consider installing it difficult.
so I’m going to run a USB C cable to the Pi
Isn’t that already the case in the photo? It looks like the converter including all that cabling is only there to get 5v for the fan, but it’s difficult to see where the usb-c comes from
more only if less is not available
Should have phrased it differently: Banning a post on a specific linux distribution is not a “ban on discussing linux” in general.
The linked article has a screenshot with a link to a post about openKylin getting removed. OP title is “Facebook ban on discussing Linux?” including the question mark. I don’t think it is accurate. At the same time I’m not defending Facebook in any way.
Discussing a specific linux distribution is not “discussing linux”.
Linking to a post on another website about a linux distribution isn’t either.
Make it
Contains a way to earn some kind of currency
So the browser itself is like an ad
Contains Ads
I don’t know why anyone ever installed Brave
Good question actually
Instead, use the black screen screen saver on your server. It uses no CPU.
The server has a screen?
Maybe limiting internet usage is enough, spending extra time on a linux pc with no internet might just be an opportunity to learn something.
After reviewing the documentation, it’s clear as day that GitHub designed repositories to work like this.
Sounds like they wanted to find a problem but it turned out to be a feature.
Without the first sentence, this could have been one of the top comments
What happens if you don’t have internet connected in the first place?
It’s an ad to call a phone number, are people buying things on the phone like this?