

As much as I love one of my 2 favorite hot sauces ever, you may want to check on copyright infringement for that name?


As much as I love one of my 2 favorite hot sauces ever, you may want to check on copyright infringement for that name?


Oh, that’s his problem with Iraq, not stealing the oil. Yes, that was the one mistake that was made. What a barren wasteland his mind must be that the only thing he thinks about is $$$.
Also if you can use displayport at least try that. DRM-ladden HDMI tends to have issues with Linux. My little server running Ubuntu Server for instance refuses to display anything over HDMI to my HP monitor. Plug DisplayPort, poof no problem.
deleted by creator
Well that’s just scary.


Do other games run fine?


Oh LOL some of these are golden

That hits home :)
“Exiting VIM - eventually” lol i’m dying


$HOME/temp, $HOME/git, ln -s $HOME/git/scripts $HOME/scripts


And they deserve every cent.


I use qtqr for this, few dependencies.
Version : 2.1-9
Description : Qt GUI that makes easy creating and decoding QR codes
Architecture : any
URL : https://launchpad.net/qr-tools
Licenses : GPL3
Groups : None
Provides : None
Depends On : python-pillow python-pyqt5 qrencode qt5-multimedia zbar
Catpuccin Mocha everywhere! https://catppuccin.com/ports/


The way Android Auto connects, your phone connects to bluetooth on the car, then they set up their own little WIFI between them. That’s why it doesn’t work on VPNs that don’t allow split tunneling.


I mean forcing a reconnect to capture the handshake is exactly how I used to speed up WIFI cracking back in college. You would need that to break in a car’s wifi in the time it’s at a red light.


Where I’m from, France, it’s not so bad I think. We have pretty strong privacy laws I feel. But now I’m in the US so yeah. I’m in cybersecurity so I see the difference with what employers are allowed to do. Also Flock cameras popping up everywhere. There are a couple near me that make me lose Android Auto’s wifi everytime I drive by them so I’m thinking it’s intercepting stuff.
They’re 100% free in the sense that they don’t ship closed code, ever. That is the goal to attain. However, we’re not there yet. For that, hardware needs to be open. Hardware can’t be as easily be made by a group of volunteers as software. Like at all. To solve this ‘transient’ state, all popular distros allow adding some sort of ‘nonfree’ repo so that, you know, shit can work. For instance, you are free to install Debian and not enable the nonfree repo, which is not enabled by default. You are also free to wonder later why your webcam doesn’t work, you can’t print, your bluetooth headset won’t pair and your fancy gaming GPU outputs 10 FPS @800x600.


So it’s gonna be ntfs so it’s a matter of handling the permissions in fstab. Because it’s not gonna link your user ids from the NTFS files and map them automatically to your UNIX users. So there are options in fstab for that. Easy to look up. For instance maybe your user is ‘user’ so you’re gonna tell fstab to assign everything in a ntfs to partition to ‘user’. Except maybe you have media files served by plex media server running under user ‘plexmediaserver’. This kind of things.
Oh non, expatrié, je l’ai découvert seulement il y a quelques mois :(