Here's the Google Lens translation:
Here's the free device manufacturer version: https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9n4wgh0z6vhq
Add --ozone-platform-hint=auto
to the command, I've done it so may times for electron stuff it's engrained into my head now haha. You can check that it works with xlsclients
.
Also QT_QPA_PLATFORM=wayland
for QT based apps is handy to know too if they're not behaving.
I might be wrong, but I believe Debian ships without sudo
, only su
by default (or at least if you configure a root password in the setup).
NTFS-3G on Linux is very stable, and I'd recommend sticking to that, although I'd avoid the newer NTFS3 driver.
But if you really want to convert, and it's data that you don't mind loosing, ntfs2btrfs
can convert NTFS partitions to BTRFS, and it's available in most distros' repositories.
Some discord servers can require a verified phone number, not any I know of, but it can be enabled.
The cool part is, the kernel and most of the user space is still running fine, so there's no restart required (although I would anyway), it's just gnome is having issues.
I've had dodgy hardware cause a kernel panic, which is much more equivalent to a Windows BSOD.
Here's the word, if you were wondering:
Firstly, there actually isn't much difference between server grade and gaming motherboards, like sure one might support ECC + IPMI and the other RGB + overclocking, but as far as compute goes, they are both effective motherboards.
Secondly, I don't think OP was going for a 'server' but more of just a workstation type build, so why one or the other?
Thirdly, why does it even matter? OP should be proud of their system whether you like it or not. Even if they are using it as a server, my first server was just some reasonably priced consumer grade parts and I never had any sort of stability issues with it.
If you're using Oracle cloud (just guessing based off 1GB), they also offer free ARM VMs with 24GB of RAM, and netbird looks to support ARM.
The title's kinda clickbait, they're removing the 'Full' option and adding a choose your own apps dialogue to the 'Minimal' (and now only) option, and installs the selected apps over the internet. This reduces ISO size since the apps aren't installed by default.
Which is an action I can agree with.
I'm not a radio engineer, but my understanding is you're just bouncing signals off the moon itself, there isn't a device that echos the signal back or anything. There are mirrors on the moon to reflect lasers back though.