Agreed. Some of that casting was SO spot on (Jonah in particular)
Agreed. Some of that casting was SO spot on (Jonah in particular)
Dark (German/Netflix)
I assume you’re talking about the order in which apps appear when you first launch rofi. That’s in the cache file in ~/.cache as something like rofi3.druncache or rofi-3.druncache (or both). Delete (or rename) them and see if that addresses your issue.
If you truly mean the config file, it’s in ~/.config/rofi. Delete or rename to see if it fixes your issue
Our girl just turned 10! Definitely miss the puppy cuteness (not the sharp-ass needle teeth though)
Yeah. SVN’s ability to do that is not experimental. I’m hoping that they make that feature much easier
One thing I like about SVN that, at least in the past, was not easy with Git is checking out sub directories.
One thing I do is check out svn+ssh://svn/home/svn/configs/server/etc and copy the .svn file over to /etc so that I can check in changes from the actual directory on my servers at home. I never found a good way to do that on Git. But, admittedly, I haven’t looked in a couple years.
Oh yeah! Definitely awesome. Bear is great!
All Along the Watchtower (favorite versions: Jimi Hendrix and Dave Matthews Band)
Looks like some process in your startup scripts (fish profile, etc) have not completed. I have seen this type of thing when NFS mounts are unreachable. Try opening another terminal window… if it does the same thing, press Ctrl+C, then run ps -ef and see what processes are running as you that might be hung
No. It is not a requirement
I’ve been using the one it came with
I had a similar problem. I had made a bunch of changes to a document and just closed LibreOffice Calc thinking it would prompt me to save it. It did not. It just exited and discarded my changes. I went in that day and turned on AutoSave.
Wez is actually pretty awesome too
I tried to name them what we actually call them when we refer to them.
In 1993, a guy I knew had a Linux server running in his dorm room. I think it was a 0.9x kernel. He dialed into the University network and I was able to telnet in through my own dial up connection to the University. He was running Slackware.
Within a couple months, I downloaded all 30+ 1.44 diskette images and built my own Slackware server. In that time I used Slackware and Red Hat (which then became Fedora before RHEL became a thing). Now I’ve pretty much settled on Debian for servers and Arch for desktop/laptop systems.
If you guys have gmail accounts, use Google Chat.
Awesome. Thanks for the feedback
This looks awesome. Does anyone have experience with it?
I haven’t used the Pixel Fold
Thank you. Will check it out!