I am a fan of Vista
Alright, let’s get out the burning stakes.
I am a fan of Vista
Alright, let’s get out the burning stakes.
Oh, the software is actually called SANE. I thought you were just making clear how bad Brother’s drivers were.
Anyone else chuckle on the parallel in saying to use the UUID is no different than saying “just hardcore the IP bro”
It’s more like setting a static IP. The UUID is set when you create the partition and won’t change unless you force it to change.
You can also use any of the GUI utilities which can add it to your fstab.
There’s a lot of things that are made way too difficult on Linux for seemingly no reason. This isn’t one of them.
I just accidentally deleted my crontab about an hour ago because r is right next to e.
Fortunately my computer backs itself up often so I could just grab the old crontab but it was annoying and would have been problematic if I didn’t.
I also had to recover my computer a few months back because someone whoopsied the default apt repositories for Ubuntu x64 arch and pushed the x86 software there instead.
It’s usually considered a poor idea to use it also as an AP.
The location usually isn’t great for your WiFi and there are better tools for the job.
OpnSense would be the easiest way if you wanted to go. It’s still not easy, but the articles online should help you out.
First you’d need a machine. I’ve got an m920q I bought off eBay for $135 after shipping.
The computer will likely only have one Ethernet port. And it’s likely the port is Realtek which isn’t supported well.
So, you’ll need to get yourself a NIC (a fancy term for a network card). There are good forum posts and articles online about the best NICs to buy for your needs. Intel is a must. However, you can find many of their NICs online labeled as another brand - usually HP, Lenovo, or Dell. Again, the forum posts will tell you what to look for.
If you bought the same computer I mentioned above, you’ll also need a riser and a bezel. Amazon and eBay will have a good selection.
Now assemble it. Flash the computer with OpnSense. Don’t plug it in as your router yet. Follow along with some basic setup guides online to figure out how you want it configured.
Once you’re happy, plug it in as your router and test that it works. If not, you’ll need to put your old router back in place until you can figure out what you need to change.
If Microsoft switches (seemlessly) to a Linux kernel, no one would really notice.
Besides quite literally every piece of software breaking, sure.
My favorite when reading sports news is “resign”.
It can mean that they quit or that they entered into a new contract.
The best part of LSCR containers is that their Docker config is rather standardized.
The worst part is they haven’t figured out logging for like 75% of them.
Lol I once searched for a specific issue I had.
I found a Github issue for the exact same bug. Perfect!
It had only one reply. “This has already been answered here. Search the other issues for the answer.”
It was the second issue ever for the repo. The first issue was entirely irrelevant. The half a dozen other issues that came after also were irrelevant.
GPT is a partitioning table. EFI is a bootloader firmware interface.
It always comes down to the vendor and driver.
On Linux, I had to go through a dozen different drivers and just as many driver versions before I found the one that worked with my printer. For Windows, it worked immediately.
With my old printer, though, it was the opposite experience. Took forever to get it working on Windows but Linux got it immediately.
You’d think by now, with the dozen different printing standards that exist, we’d have some sort of plug and play driver that could work with every printer.
Set up a CUPS server and it’ll work fine with Windows too.
Printers are a massive headache on both. But at least with CUPS it’s only a massive headache once.
I had a problem with some software I was using a few weeks back. I googled the error and the one result was a closed GitHub issue matching it exactly.
The sole reply just said that the poster should stop being lazy because the problem has been discussed in other issue reports.
Except that was the very first issue created for that repository.
How many major distros aren’t run by for-profit entities nowadays? If you want any sort of enterprise use, you need to offer a 24/7 live support plan.
I guess the big difference is that Canonical is hoping to make money off the home users too.
I’ll just use apt to bypass the snaps…
$ sudo apt install xyz
Installing snap for xyz...
Okay what the fuck
That doesn’t sound right but I don’t know enough about Ubuntu off-shoots to dispute it.
It’s safe until someone oopsies the repos and mislabels the i386 packages as x64.
Ubuntu did this a few months back. I spent hours trying to fix it afterwards. Seems they got it fixed decently quick so it was likely just bad timing on my part.
Do developers get hard-ons for using nonstandard flags?
Use -h, --help
. None of this “no hyphen” bullshit or using the plus sign or a different flag like --info
Indiana waiting for Texas and Florida to ban it so it can do something more extreme but without any flak.