If you have 4 TB disk, you don’t care until it is getting full.
If you have 4 TB disk, you don’t care until it is getting full.
Works as intended. kthxbye
KISS-ish. Default init is systemd. Debian also provides customized configuration of services.
Building a deb package isn’t that straightforward as Arch’s PKGBUILD.
Until it doesn’t /jk
If you need fresh version of some software, Flatpak is a nice solution.
You can also use Docker, it just works.
Props to the maintainers and developers.
RIP shrooms, long live shrooms.
More interesting things:
- The “systemd-tmpfiles --purge” option is reworked to only apply to tmpfiles.d/ lines marked with the new “$” flag. This is to better address systemd’s --purge deleting too many files by accident.
- Systemd 258 also aims to remove support for the (deprecated) System V service scripts support.
- systemd-boot menu will now react to volume up/down rocker presses in the same way as arrow up/down presses. This is for smartphones and other devices that may have volume up/down rockers but not arrow keys.
I don’t say that. Rather it’s just a trivia.
Funny thing, it repacks a deb package.
See manifest.
Laughs in AT standard.
¸,ø¤° Thanks for sharing!!1 xoxo º¤ø,¸
I like the name, “miny” means “mines” in Polish.
Probably unrepairable, no upgrades?
Never thought about it, but I think it’s mainly left shift and control key.
[…] with negligible performance penalty
Which CPU do you have?
Draw the rest fricking duck.
Cursed quacku
Soon outdated /s