

To me, the meme acknowledges that GOG installers are shared in groups, which is piracy since the other people didn’t pay for it. (That doesn’t mean it’s bad btw.)


To me, the meme acknowledges that GOG installers are shared in groups, which is piracy since the other people didn’t pay for it. (That doesn’t mean it’s bad btw.)


To me, the meme acknowledges that GOG installers are shared in groups, which is piracy since the other people didn’t pay for it. (That doesn’t mean it’s bad btw.)


But I heard ext4 was more stable. What are the trade offs?


Thanks


How do I set that up?


Like what?


I didn’t need home folder snapshots.


Am I doing something wrong? Not seeing a particular option? I have never seen or experienced what you’re describing.


Thanks!


Thanks I think this is the answer I was looking for!


Thanks!


Alright, thanks, I’ll try some experiments the next time I have the opportunity to do so.


Makes sense, thanks.


In my next reinstall, can I combine the / and swap partitions (they’re next to each other so I can do this) and will swap files just be automatically created instead?


How about when I need to reinstall the OS? Will overwriting / not touch /home like with my current set up?


How about when I reinstall the OS? Will it only affect the / and not touch the /home?


I use btrfs for my / because I can use Linux Mint’s Timeshift tool to make snapshots, but I don’t want snapshots of /home to be included. Am I doing this wrong?


Also, if I don’t indicate a swap partition during install, would the OS use swap files automatically?


Alright, but actually I don’t think I’m maximizing my use of btrfs. I only use btrfs because of its compatibility with Linux Mint’s Timeshift tool. Would you be implying if I used btrfs for the whole partition, I can reinstall / without overwriting /home?
To me, the meme acknowledges that GOG installers are shared in groups, which is piracy since the other people didn’t pay for it. (That doesn’t mean it’s bad btw.)