

Regardless, if you’re building something without a purpose, assign it a dedicated purpose instead of just making it some other running machine.


Regardless, if you’re building something without a purpose, assign it a dedicated purpose instead of just making it some other running machine.


You literally say in your post you’re building another machine.
Make it a single purpose machine that does the thing you need it for.


Separate the use-case here:
For your desktop, whatever works. There is no one distro that gives you some leg-up on performance or anything else. You can install the same software on all, and the kernel is largely the same.
Just get or build a NAS for hosting media. A Synology or Qnap has a bit of added cost, but the maintenance overhead is reduced by a LOT versus running TrueNAS, OMV, or similar. That being said, choose the right tool for the job, and don’t just run Debian for this purpose because it just adding admin overhead you don’t need. This probably has been solved from your specific angle. What you want is simplicity in maintenance. Being able to hotswap and repair a failed drive means a huge win.


Kinda just sounds like the new-ish reality of younger and terminally online folks who have passed on IRL relationships and are just experiencing things you probably should have through normal socializing in your teens.
These are breakup feelings. You just have to feel it, recognize what it is, understand what it is, and work through it CONSTRUCTIVELY. Don’t be a fucking dick, don’t get overly emotional. It might suck, but it’s not the first or last time you’ll feel it if you’re feeling it now. Just try and go about your life, fix mistakes, keep your other relationships healthy, and you’ll eventually find another situation that works better for you.


Lots of articles out there about it, but generally you’re looking at background details at this stage. Texts that are wiggly, pictures that are blobs, things around the periphery of individual scenes is usually where you catch stuff. Models are still really bad at perspective and ordering of objects.


Self-host Umami and set the tracker URL to your custom domain (it gives the URL once up and running) and it won’t get blocked or cause these problems with blacklists. Pretty easy.


There’s more than a few FOSS and privacy focused analytics tools it there. Umami is very simple but great: https://github.com/umami-software/umami
There are others as well


That has more to do with food production laws than anything. Japan gets fresh food delivered every morning to their convenience stores, and people legitimately go for the food because it’s quick, cheap, and great quality. That’s because of the laws, not the business choices.


I think there is a trust factor with gas stations and fresh foods. That being said, I’ve seen plenty with Fried Chicken.


Any version control system works for this.
If you want something fairly user friendly, maybe look at Joplin or Logseq which are both specifically for text.


Wut.
It’s a sketch show.
“You win wars, friends, and companionship with ideas and attitudes, not solely actions”


Young and immature people. Once you realize what you need in your life to be happy, and what in another person compliments, it doesn’t matter whatsoever.
Some vain or narcissistic people stuck in arrested development never figure that out. Usually divorced a number of times.


They have a simple bash installer from what I see. You can also install everything via pip as well. Couple quick commands.
That bug report mentions a few versions, so maybe just go back to whatever version was working on your other machine.


This looks like a sandboxing issue. Using the “no-sandbox” flag has never worked on AppImage from what I remember, except for very light runtimes. Running with sudo will throw that error because the root user has no display manager running.
Just try running the installer if you don’t want to mess around with debugging the AppImage. Check the GitHub Issues for related keywords and see if others are running into the same issue, maybe it’s just a specific release, or SELinux causing the problem.


Anti-glare is kind of a scam, especially when you’re talking about sunlight. You can either have material that diffuses the light to kit reflect as much, or shift it on a bounce so your eyes don’t notice it as much.
I think most people don’t realize this and will probably give most things a bad rating based on their unrealistic expectations. Depending on your scenario, you may have to just try a bunch of different things.
Edit: also, I think you’re asking about the NEW Samsung phone with a privacy filter. That’s the S25 or S26, I don’t know, but it’s not an anti-glare filter at all. It just makes viewing from an extreme side angle difficult.


Super weird take.
You think people only date or have relationships within specific economic classes? Ooof.
Linux has been the most prolific OS on devices for 25 years, friend.
Need output to be able to tell you anything. Post the errors.