

Mulvad is 5 euro per month for up to 5 devices. You could split it with 4 other people…
I’m not an AI


Mulvad is 5 euro per month for up to 5 devices. You could split it with 4 other people…


Most of the parts of a lock are the same. However, the small internal parts, like pins and springs, are variable and can be changed out, usually by a locksmith. Those are the parts that require a matching key.


If the file is already selected you can do this from the keyboard:
SHIFT+F10 -> h -> ARROW KEYS (to highlight Firefox) -> ENTER


yeah, I’m not saying its fake but it does read just like a linux-horror creepypasta


so worth it


I advise you to take a break from spamming about your project to learn how to post links. In your previous posts people replied and showed you exactly how to do it. The fact that you still are posting broken links doesn’t inspire much confidence in the quality of your project.


There’s a old school tool call sar which can help you figure out what is causing the performance issues. Found a recent guide: Mastering sar in Linux: A Comprehensive Guide


If your system uses systemd you can set resource limits like cpu per process or user.
the only book i own on text editing


Great news! I love this show. I’m all in on wholesome tv this year.


There is no such thing as maintenance free hosting. There is just saving it all up for the eventual outage.


yes but usually at the family and friends distribution level


Send them a nice card with a personal note of thanks


First off, only a subset of cursive systems connect all letters. These are called Continuous Cursive. Second, many cursive writing systems do include numbers.


I think it’s a cute way to express that what I do is pretty neat and also that I’m a real human being, not some corporate robot
Might want to be careful with that. Lately a lot of people see emoji in writing where you wouldn’t typically expect it to be a sign of ChatGPT writing.
I agree with the idea of debloating and hardening your systems.
It helps to have some context as the approach I would take depends on what kind of system I’m running. I think its also good to identify your priorities to hone your approach.
When I want stability, fast security updates, minimal install size, I usually use Alpine which indeed uses the lighter busybox bin/sh instead of bash.
When it comes to my workstation shell I’m more focused on utility than size. So bash or zsh or fish, or whatever you find the most useful, makes sense to use.


yeah and pretty low effort at that


Frtiz Super Zero
If your interest is in starting arguments in their community it seems like a reasonable response to me. Fuck AI is expressly for people who hate LLMS, not for people looking to argue about it.