the command ss shows connections
he/him
the command ss shows connections
I work in a company that helps shop owners with their shops. Some shop software has bad search as a default. You need a skilled person to configure it. We do it for some, but others don’t care. And then there’s people who think they can do it better, with varying results.
I guess that’s why Amazon search is so bad. It really feels like some boss ordered his tech staff around to add too many things, like substitutions, translations etc., and now it’s crap.
if they’re all already hard linked into the human folder, why rename them
use a mixer application (there are a lot) and check the levels and if maybe a gain boost is activated (not all hardware has it)
just make sure you have backups and stuff like this doesn’t matter
also, you should make backups and have a restore strategy that covers cases like this.
you can boot from a liveCD or USB, then mount the main OS, bind mount dev and proc, chroot into it and reconfigure/reinstall the boot loader
what is the clear thing in the center?
VMs can be slow AF tho. Also, they use up a lot of disk space and RAM, because you have a whole ectra OS in there. But yeah, a lot of proprietary things work better in VMs with their native OS.
It’s yahoo news. It’s pure clickbait. Idk why they do this they have some decent other services.
things that differ between distros, because everyone thinks they can do it better than others: multimedia and sound, firewall config, service management, different init systems, switching default when multiple packages provide the same feature and are installed in parallel, config file migration during updates, making and installing your own custom kernel, selection of free games available.
a bootable removable medium that can display and chainload all the installed OSes
No idea. The USB should be in there. Can you look onto the USB from Windows? (but don’t change anything on it) Maybe the port doesn’t work properly.
You should try enabling the options in:
and disable:
then Restart>Exit Saving Changes and press F12 furiously during next boot (as i don’t know when exactly) and select USB.
did you try and press F1 at the logo screen after power on and adjust settings in the UEFI BIOS Config, Security and Startup menus?
what i don’t like about most tiling WMs is they are keyboard only. you can’t hold a beverage in one hand and use them easily with the mouse. only very few let you also do most things with mouse (notion for example). currently i use Gnome (mutter standard WM) with the Forge extension (that adds tiling) for that reason. It’s not perfect, but lets me use my phone with one hand and operate the PC with the other etc.
that’s not watching the events though, just showing the log of the service for dbus. the events can be watched with dbus-monitor
with the command dbus-monitor
it prints the events while they happen
I think Ubuntu is very good, if you want quick and easy. It’s incedibly painless.
However, it does forced auto updates by default. They are called unattended-upgrades and run in the background by default. You can pause or disable them though. Also snaps auto update silently, by default. That can also be paused, though.
What really sucks is, if you don’t have a printer it continues to try and install cups, which can be a security concern. However, I successfully blocked it by creating an immutable file where it would put the snap, while it was uninstalled.