CMahaff

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Curious did you get the survey popup in desktop mode on the deck? Or does it work in "big picture"?

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I got the hardware survey on my Windows PC, but not on my Steamdeck. So I wonder if there is only 1 survey per user, and most people don't use a steamdeck exclusively?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

One thing you could do that I don't see mentioned here is to install Virtual Box in Windows and create a Linux Mint Virtual Machine. It's basically installing a computer within a computer. You should be able to find some tutorials online.

This would let you try Linux Mint in a sandbox within Windows so that you could experiment a bit with everything before changing anything.

Just keep in mind that within the VM, things will be less performant, especially graphically, and certain peripherals, etc. might not work. But it would let you test out installing the software you want, the cloud storage solution you want, browsing around, etc.

Speaking of graphics, you'll want to do some research about how well supported your GPU is. It will almost certainly "work" out of the box, but if you want to get the most performance out of it, like Windows, you're going to need special drivers. I've heard Nvidia can be a bit of a pain, but I think it varies by model.

I wouldn't be too worried about the touch screen as that will probably work - or at least has on every laptop I've tried. I've had more issues with things like fingerprint scanners generally speaking. Definitely check out everything you can think of when you install, like Bluetooth, cameras, microphone, peripherals, etc. Oh and when using the laptop definitely manually knock yourself down out of performance mode using the upper-righthand corner in gnome. For me at least, it makes a huge difference in battery life if I'm in performance vs balanced vs power saver. Windows is better at automatically making those adjustments.

I've also heard that lately Microsoft is making dual-boot harder - notably that Windows updates will just casually break your dual-boot and revert it to just Windows. I don't know the details since it's been years since I've done it myself, but something to keep in mind.

Finally I'll throw out there to make sure you have a recovery plan if the install goes south. Have all your files backed up. Have a copy of Linux and Windows installers ready. It honestly should be fine, but especially if this is your only PC you don't want to be stuck if you have some kind of issue, accidentally blow away your laptop's SSD, etc . Not trying to scare you or anything, but better safe than sorry, right?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

I'm pretty sure @[email protected] has said before what he uses. I thought back in the day it was publicly listed with the expenses, but I couldn't find it.

The most recent update I found was here: https://lemmy.world/post/75556

But it could definitely be old information, I'd take the other commenter's advice and ask in the admin channel to be sure.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

More of a debugging step, but have you tried running lsinitrd on the initramfs afterwards to verify your script actually got added?

You theoretically could decompress the entire image to look around as well. I don't know the specifics for alpine, but presumably there would be a file present somewhere that should be calling your custom script.

[–] [email protected] 47 points 1 month ago

Really incredible that the thrusters still function at all after all this time - and that it has any fuel left / usable fuel after all this time.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

It looks like there are instructions here about hosting your own flatpak instance: https://docs.flatpak.org/en/latest/hosting-a-repository.html

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Doubling what Klaymore said, I've seen this "just work" as long as all partitions have the same password, no key files necessary.

That said, if you needed to use a key file for some reason, that should work too, especially if your root directory is one big partition. Keep in mind too that the luks commands for creating a password-based encrypted partition vs a keyfile-based encrypted partition are different, so you can't, for example, put your plaintext password into a file and expect that to unlock a LUKS partition that was setup with a password.

But the kernel should be trying to mount your root partition first at boot time where it will prompt for the password. After that it would look to any /etc/crypttab entries for information about unlocking the other partitions. In that file you can provide a path to your key file, and as long as it's on the same partition as the crypttab it should be able to unlock any other partitions you have at boot time.

It is also possible, as one of your links shows, to automatically unlock even the root partition by putting a key file and custom /etc/crypttab into your initramfs (first thing mounted at boot time), but it's not secure to do so since the initramfs isn't (and can't be) encrypted - it's kind of the digital equivalent of hiding the house key under the door mat.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 months ago (8 children)

Out of curiosity, what content are you looking for? Discovery on Lemmy can be a problem, but sometimes the communities are there and even active, just buried.

But may I also suggest searching by Top Day/12-hour/6-hour to see the most active posts. Lemmy's scaled algorithm still doesn't get it quite right IMO.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 3 months ago (1 children)

The CEO said they were going to add pay-walled subreddits at an earnings call.

So... Yep.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I know for me, at least with gnome, toggling between performance, balanced, and battery saver modes dramatically changes my battery life on Ubuntu, so I have to toggle it manually to not drain my battery life if it's mostly sitting there. I don't know if Mint is the same, but just throwing out the "obvious" for anyone else running Linux on a laptop.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 4 months ago

Found a blog post that gives a quick overview of how to do git via email in general: https://peter.eisentraut.org/blog/2023/05/09/how-to-submit-a-patch-by-email-2023-edition

So at least from my understanding you'd make your changes, email the contents of the patch to the maintainer, and then they'd apply it on their side, do code review, email you comments, etc. until it was in an acceptable state.

There's also the full kernel development wiki that goes into all the specifics: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.16/process/howto.html

(I never got through the whole thing)

 

You will want to change your Cargo.toml to point to the Lemmy Github repository + either a specific tag or branch for the version you want to target.

See the examples here: https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/specifying-dependencies.html#specifying-dependencies-from-git-repositories

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/2216085

Search Lemmyverse is good for finding communities.

I posted this on the other site but I thought I'd copy over here too, lots of good communities around to subscribe to if you want a more casual/fun frontpage that isn't just tech news, elon musk, or politics.

note: all of these communities have posts. If they appear empty, it simply means nobody on the instance you use has visited them before (or you might have blocked them and forgot, I've done it before, lol)!


Conversation communities

These are places that are 'chatty', good if you want a lot of comments.

"ask" based
Casual chat / Misc

Hobbies, Creative, & Passions

Misc
Artwork
Cooking, food, drinks

Generally mostly nice pics of food:

Gardening / Plants
Keyboard enthusiasts
Knitting, Stitching, Crocheting, etc
Reading & Writing
Sport

Honestly there are so many sport communities around - if you search Lemmyverse for popular sports, you will almost certainly find more.


Nice/Interesting/Funny pictures

Animals

Literally just pictures of cute animals.

Comics
Flags
Maps
Memes

Meme communities in general can overload your feed, so keep that in mind.

Photography

Games

Board Games / Table top games

The ttrpg.network instance has a lot of communities based around table top gaming & RPGs.

note: the battlemaps communities seem to mostly cross-post between eachother at the moment.

Video Games

Knowledge (e.g history, science)


Space


TV (television), movies, film


Music

Lots of music communities on Lemmy. Search Lemmyverse for genres of interest for more, this definitely isn't exhaustive.

Note that music communities generally have low comment counts, from my experience.

There's also:

 

(Full disclosure: I made one of the tools)

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/1292268

lemmy.world cross-post link: https://lemmy.world/post/1251192

With the vlemmy situation ongoing, i feel like it would be useful to put this here (i did not make either of these tools)

Lemmy Account Settings Instance Migrator (LASIM) copies all your subscribed communities and blocks and lets you upload them to another account, in just a few clicks

lemmy-migrate does the same thing but without a GUI and support for uploading your backup to multiple accounts at once

 

See the linked page for information about how it works, limitations, etc. and I’ll of course answer any questions below!

Right now supports just Lemmy BE 0.18.1 (rc9, rc10, and final release).

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1171660

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1060796

See the linked page for information about how it works, limitations, etc. and I'll of course answer any questions below!

As I have stated in the release section, this software is alpha so please don't be afraid to report bugs!

Releases are here: https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim/releases

Right now the program only supports Lemmy BE 0.18.1-rc9, but new releases will try to support new versions as they are released. The Lemmy API is changing a ton right now, but I'll try to keep up.

Note: Supports 0.18.1-rc9+ - I have tested it with rc9, rc10, and the final release of 0.18.1.

 

Or have I misunderstood?

I suspect the response will be that content on your instance should always be considered public, and that you can't really stop a bad actor from spinning up fake instances or scraping your site for the data regardless, but I just wanted to confirm.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1060796

See the linked page for information about how it works, limitations, etc. and I'll of course answer any questions below!

As I have stated in the release section, this software is alpha so please don't be afraid to report bugs!

Releases are here: https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim/releases

Right now the program only supports Lemmy BE 0.18.1-rc9, but new releases will try to support new versions as they are released. The Lemmy API is changing a ton right now, but I'll try to keep up.

Note: Supports 0.18.1-rc9+ - I have tested it with rc9, rc10, and the final release of 0.18.1.

 

See the linked page for information about how it works, limitations, etc. and I'll of course answer any questions below!

As I have stated in the release section, this software is alpha so please don't be afraid to report bugs!

Releases are here: https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim/releases

Right now the program only supports Lemmy BE 0.18.1-rc9, but new releases will try to support new versions as they are released. The Lemmy API is changing a ton right now, but I'll try to keep up.

 
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