Constant BSODs in Windows XP (probably caused by NVidia drivers)
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robinj1995@feddit.nlto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Apparently, Catholic dating is all about money632·1 year agoApparently, Catholic dating is all about money
Usually what they actually mean by “strong family values”
CentOS Stream 8. Which I regret. Because they ended support without upgrade path.
robinj1995@feddit.nlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•PSA: GoDaddy gated their own API. DDNS users warnedEnglish9·1 year agoWarning: Cloudflare does not allow you to change the nameservers of domains you register with them unless you pay for some insanely priced subscription. For many of us who register domains at various registrar’s but want to be able to centrally manage DNS, hiding such basic functionality behind an extremely steep paywall makes Cloudflare a no-go.
robinj1995@feddit.nlto Linux@lemmy.ml•[SOLVED] Fedora 40 won't boot with Kernel 6.8.10 or above3·1 year agodev-mapper swap…
Any
resume
argument in your boot commands? Try removing them and see what happens
robinj1995@feddit.nlto Linux@lemmy.ml•What about a linux phone that has a full Android OS sleeping in parallel? Like OnePlus Watch 2 that runs 2 OSs at the same time.58·1 year agoOk boomer? This is just out of touch with modern day reality.
The fact that there’s entire communities full of people who will spend energy trying to convince you to give it a try, rather than a corporation with a marketing budget and lobbying power :)
A good place to start because it’s a likely culprit is anything mentioning “OOM” (which refers to Out Of Memory)
There are many reasons one could choose to hate Snap packages, and this not one of them. It’s like hating a webbrowser because it spawns 20 processes that (the horror) you would all see when you run
ps
. It’s just a part of how container technologies work.
Purist, hard-line stuff like this will honestly just get you nowhere in 2023. I get where you’re coming from, but it’s simply not realistic. This is what browser extensions are for.
You should, and you will :) X11 is legacy, and is going to die. The only question is whether you’re going to try and hold on to a broken system riddled with security vulnerabilities for as long as possible until you’re forced to switch, or whether you’re just going to enable what is mostly already the default stack on most desktop Linux systems anyway.
FOSDEM has a beer brewed every year for the event, I wonder, surely that’d be open.