OatPotato [they/them, she/her]

Speak french (native) & english (still progressing)

Trans (gender undefined) 🏳️‍⚧

Devops on cloud (Terraform, Kubernetes) & dev (Rust, TypeScript, Python) 💻

Didgeridoo 🦘

Vegan 🐖

  • 0 Posts
  • 11 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: May 19th, 2024

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  • If you still need help:

    1. Open a TTY (Ctrl+Alt+F3 for example, works from F1 to F6 but depending on Wayland or Xorg F1, F2 and/or F6 may be used so F3 should be good, otherwise try another one).
    2. The TTY will ask for your username and password, so login with your normal user (not root).
    3. You shoud get to an interactive shell, so you can go to the Gnome extensions directory (cd ~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/).
    4. You can now remove the problematic extension (rm -r …).
    5. Now either you reboot your computer (the reboot command will be enough to restart the computer), this will ensure you don’t keep a remaining session and you’ll boot in your login manager (GDM I guess).

    Hope it helps!









  • It’s perfectly legal but personally, I would not find this really ethical: a lot of people don’t know F-Droid and if they find your application directly in the Play Store, they won’t know they can have it, the exact same application, for free but elsewhere.

    I prefere one of those solutions:

    • The ability to send a donation, it’s a very common thing.
    • Having the same application twice on the Play Store, one for free and one with a fixed price (I don’t remember which app do this but I saw it once).

    Of course this is my point of view, everyone has its own vision of what is ethical or not. Do not take my comment as the absolute truth!