

grml-zsh-config
is its name, and it’s always one of the first things I install on a fresh system. I’ll never understand why it isn’t the default.
grml-zsh-config
is its name, and it’s always one of the first things I install on a fresh system. I’ll never understand why it isn’t the default.
Yeah, this is specific to the Google Messages app. For now, anyway.
Automating updates is generally frowned upon, that’s when things can break. But waiting to run updates until you feel like it (instead of daily) is totally fine. I’ve been using Arch and its forks for years, and have always updated once a week unless something was wrong.
The devs have stated otherwise. The project was originally announced on an Arch Linux forum, so they included a nod in the name.
It isn’t recommended, but dpkg will install it if you really want to. You just need to handle dependencies manually.
But it’s a pretty rare issue. If something isn’t available in the official repo, AUR probably has it.
Caller (Phone) has a package available on their github you can grab now, and f-droid should recognize the install once it hits the repos. They’re releasing pretty quickly, all things considered.
To add to this, Fossify just released their phone app. It hasn’t hit the repos yet, but it’s on their github.
The Fossify forks of simple apps should be coming soon too, if you want to stick with something familiar. They’ve already released their calendar, gallery, and file manager, the rest should be ready pretty soon.
If you’re comfortable, you’re fine. Anything more would just be to speed up the rebuild, so it’s less important if you don’t mind taking the time.
There are some SFW uses too. I use it when I play things my nieces and nephews like, so they don’t flood me with party invites.
Eh, just hit it with the 777 and pray. Then swear at it some more.
You can, and it hurts about as much as you’d imagine it would.
It doesn’t seem like a huge stretch. If somebody had a stored collection, and didn’t share the server with anybody, why not point Plex at that folder? There’s even an *arr for it, so it fits right into the usual stack.
If it’s anything like how the US deals with these things: tobacco is heavily taxed, vaping is taxed far less. They don’t give a shit who uses nicotine, just that they do so in a profitable way.
It does, but it’s done me wrong a few times so I never recommend it. For all I know it’s fine these days, but old grudges are hard do shake.
For laptops, I’ve been using EndeavourOS lately. All of the Arch goodness, but with an easy installer that handles the DE too. It’s as close to “just works” as you can get while still having pacman + AUR at the end.
I still love raw Arch, but I leave that for server installs.
My daily driver right now is an old Lenovo Ideapad (50-70 I think) with EndeavourOS, I have a few other assorted Thinkpads and Ideapads running mainly EOS or Arch, and home servers running Arch. I use Arch btw.
The “backup” laptops are flexible though, I distro-hop on them fairly often. Older Lenovos are usually great for Linux compatibility.
EndeavourOS is it. It’s basically a better version of archinstall, especially if you’re planning to install a DE.
I don’t know about an hourglass specifically, but there are some options. Should be in system settings, applications, launch feedback and/or busy cursor.
The Copilot integration they recently pushed to 11 says otherwise. They’re going hard on AI moving forward.