I say “zeesh”. Like “sheesh” with a z.
I say “zeesh”. Like “sheesh” with a z.
Systems/Journald keeps 4GB of logs stored by default.
Some also do have specific use cases where they work really well, like Tea Tree Oil for acne and nail fungus or Peppermint oil for nausea. Most of them don’t do anything though.
50GB for the simple dual layer discs. You can theoretically reach 100GB with triple layer disks. The largest BDRip I have is 90GB for the Super Mario Bros. Movie.
Edit: UHD Blu-ray only supports dual and triple layer disks, not quad. Quad layer discs do exist though, with up to 128GB of capacity.
It’s actually for both types according to the articles in Nature
Bread and beer. The reason that modern civilization exists. Of course, the modern versions are quite different from the ancient ones
I actually have my ~/.cache
mounted as a tmpfs. No need to write that to disk when I have like 50GB of free RAM most of the time.
“Free” memory is actually usually used for cache. So instead of waiting to get data from the disk, the system can just read it directly from RAM after the first access. The more RAM you have, the more free space you’ll have to use for cache. My machine often has over 20GB of RAM used as cache. You can see this with free -m
. IIRC both Gnome and KDE’s system managers also show that now.
Oats don’t contain gluten
Not necessarily. I found out that bitwarden can generate a QR code that you just scan with your phone that allows your phone to act as a passkey, no browser support required. I was surprised when I discovered that. I had set up my phone as a passkey in Windows, and Windows can use phones as a passkey directly; on Linux that’s not supported so it just gave me a QR code that worked seamlessly. It’s not like a browser URL, but actually triggers the phone’s passkey authentication, kinda like QR codes for WiFi authentication. Pretty neat.
That wild. I can’t even do 4 reps of 45kg barbell overhead press. Then again I am quite a small person. I only weigh 57kg.
Why does it matter what the US says? Is the US allies or even friendly with either of these countries?
So the 3rd dragon should just be /dev/nvme%d
Just use the docker container
Or they just use a distro that doesn’t frequently break dependencies. I used to experience lots of dependency issues on Ubuntu many years ago. Been on Arch for ~10 years and have only had 1 dependency issue, which was fixed within 1 day.
Did that cause breaks on certain distros? No issues with it on Arch.
That requires podman or some other program.
No, systemd-nspawn
doesn’t need any other container management program, it’s its own thing.
Flatpak uses polkit for permissions. System level flatpak updates are typically permitted without password by polkit but only for local users. For SSH, most flatpak operations require a password, so it’s a mess if you try to run an update on system level flatpaks without sudo
, which solves OP’s problem. They could also move everything to a user level install, which IMO makes more sense for flatpaks than the default system level mode.
Which is what flatpak will always do unless provided with the --user
flag.
run0
is the newsudo su