Sounds like “The witcher 3” world will be a good fit for your daughter curiosity, the guest line however is too dark for her age.
Sounds like “The witcher 3” world will be a good fit for your daughter curiosity, the guest line however is too dark for her age.
Mtp is your friend, here is hiw I do it on my devices (samsung a23 and both opensuse and arch):
I connect my phone to my pc. Then select mtp in the phone notification.
Start my file manager (dolphine or whatever) and access my phone storage from there.
Make sure to allow the notification on the phone asking if you want to sahre your storage with the external device.
Link is not working
lspci shows Realtek RTL8852AE which is a Wifi6 (ax) adapter, It may not support the latest standard but I don’t think it’s that old.
I had one before, then 2060, then 2080 and finally 6800 (current one), how is your nvidia experience right now compared to 2018? Any better?
I like to think a subvolume is a directory on my filesystem that:
This is by no mead a definition for BTRFS subvolume, but I hope you get the idea.
One EFI + one ROOT partition is what I do on both my laptop and desktop for years, /home is a subvolume to my root partition. This setup suits my needs as I don’t have to worry about how big should my root or home (gaming) partition should be.
I use Arch on my desktop and Opensuse on my laptop. They both have options to set up subvolumes from their installer, Debian does not, and I’m not sure about other distros, but you can always set that up after installation, just make your home partition the last one (after the root partition) so you can easily delete it after and grow the root partition without much blocks relocation.
No problem here with Opensuse slowroll (Sway WM) and a Realtek bluetootth radio, I’m using blueman for managing enabling/managing bluetooth connections.
Probably to drop support for xorg. Plasma 6 is going to be wayland by default, while xfce is slow when it comes to wayland adoption
I could be wrong, but i think that was probably on the alpha release, which is now the beta release, so maybe the next stable release will have wayland by default.
Dejavu is the right font for me for both ebglush and arabic letters.
That is why I’m actually doing it, we have a couple of old workstation with Win7 we almost never use at my workplace. I use my portable debian on these machines to practice bash scripting, python and recently docker.
I few thing to consider:
Compare the SN number in the SMART output with the SN on the drive, they should be the same or else theseller showed you uncorrect SMART output or uncorrect drive.
Thank you very much for the explanations.
Would you please explain (then all installs are user install). I dont use flatpack, but the last time I used it (on Tumbleweed) I remember it downloaded its applications/runtime stuff to /var/lib/flatpak then installing them to ~/.local/share/flatpak in the home folder of every user who runs those flatpak applications.
LVM gives you the ability to downsize and resize without having to worry about partitions boundaries. So, if you find yourself in need for storage you can downsize the home partition and grow the root.
That said, I have debian/i3 INSTALLED ON A 16GB USB with a couple of docker containers and vscodium and it is around 10/14gb usage.
“Coming soon” for me started when major DEs started abandoning xorg, not when they adopted wayland.
That is where you put your optional packages, everyone has his own use for it. I use it to stocke my docker containers config