They’re taking completely different approaches to fusion though.
They’re taking completely different approaches to fusion though.
It literally has the second most concurrent players of any game on Steam at the moment and still has over half of the concurrent player numbers compared to its peak 8 years ago.
Systems/Journald keeps 4GB of logs stored by default.
Yeah, from the article “while many tau-based therapies show promise in animal models, their translation into effective medicine for humans ‘has so far failed.’”.
Mainly because Steam actually provides a really good quality service. Most corporations over time charge more while getting worse on quality. People can sell their games for cheaper on Epic which only has a 12% fee, but Epic’s service is much worse.
They don’t really though. They’re talking about selling steam keys in a different platform, not selling the game on a different platform (like Epic Games for instance). You can sell the game for cheaper on Epic or GOG if you want to.
I guess all plastic will be biodegradable eventually.
I actually have my ~/.cache
mounted as a tmpfs. No need to write that to disk when I have like 50GB of free RAM most of the time.
“Free” memory is actually usually used for cache. So instead of waiting to get data from the disk, the system can just read it directly from RAM after the first access. The more RAM you have, the more free space you’ll have to use for cache. My machine often has over 20GB of RAM used as cache. You can see this with free -m
. IIRC both Gnome and KDE’s system managers also show that now.
That’s accurate, but anything above 0.5% is considered alcoholic in the US. There have been some small pushes to get the limit increased to 1.25%, which would make the usual levels of alcohol in normal kombucha legal, but I don’t think that’ll actually ever happen.
But then you have to restrict your userbase to over 21s and can’t sell it in many supermarkets. Without alcohol it can be sold as a soft drink.
I think the alcohol removal process increases the price quite a bit. Still very marked up though.
Skong?
Not necessarily. I found out that bitwarden can generate a QR code that you just scan with your phone that allows your phone to act as a passkey, no browser support required. I was surprised when I discovered that. I had set up my phone as a passkey in Windows, and Windows can use phones as a passkey directly; on Linux that’s not supported so it just gave me a QR code that worked seamlessly. It’s not like a browser URL, but actually triggers the phone’s passkey authentication, kinda like QR codes for WiFi authentication. Pretty neat.
So the 3rd dragon should just be /dev/nvme%d
Or they just use a distro that doesn’t frequently break dependencies. I used to experience lots of dependency issues on Ubuntu many years ago. Been on Arch for ~10 years and have only had 1 dependency issue, which was fixed within 1 day.
Did that cause breaks on certain distros? No issues with it on Arch.
That requires podman or some other program.
No, systemd-nspawn
doesn’t need any other container management program, it’s its own thing.
Flatpak uses polkit for permissions. System level flatpak updates are typically permitted without password by polkit but only for local users. For SSH, most flatpak operations require a password, so it’s a mess if you try to run an update on system level flatpaks without sudo
, which solves OP’s problem. They could also move everything to a user level install, which IMO makes more sense for flatpaks than the default system level mode.
Bananas in the US are pretty large though.