Nobody mentioned it yet, but my current no hassle solution is to:
just physically move the nvme from one computer to the other
Nobody mentioned it yet, but my current no hassle solution is to:
just physically move the nvme from one computer to the other
inbefore Musk-OS
What should I do?
Install Windows on his laptop, or better yet let him do it and sit besides him for guidance, so that he can learn to reinstall in case something breaks badly.
It's nice to showcase your favourite OS and make people curious but don't abuse your friends with your Linux preference by forcing it onto them.
(Also, if you fix everything for them all the time, how will they learn?)
There isn't even a real photoshop competitor in the broader market, but you want to further split the hobbyist devs effort on linux as well?
I think instead it would be better to focus all the effort on a single solution that strives to cover all of photoshops features, with at least equal or better usability. Like has been done with Blender and godot for example. (And GIMP is sadly faaar from it still)
lol good!
Fuck stalky social media. Instagram is just there for farming engagement for ads and make you scroll for hours.
If you want to look at truly great photography or art go to a museum or exhibition.
Reminds me of when they started printing "vegan" and "gluten free" on water bottles.
It doesn't matter much what Linux you use. Rather what is your desktop environment? (KDE Plasma, Gnome, sway etc.)
On KDE for example there is a shortcut to restart the compositor, which might fix your issue.
But in general you might have luck "restarting" it by switching the tty. You do that by pressing CTRL + ALT + some function key between F1 and F8 (the standard gui tty number depends on the distro). Try to switch to a non gui tty and then back.
For example, on my distro I would do:
but on yours it might be F7 or some other.
I did that and:
The only file that is correct is only of the regular version, so there are a lot of variations missing - you wouldn't be able to get the same files as by following the paid way. The upload is 8 years old and seems to be part of an opensource website.
There is another upload from 4 years ago, where the files appear to be called by the same name, but it's not the same font at all. Seems to be part of a website again, which shows a couple of fonts for comparison. Maybe they've put it there as a placeholder.
Thats why I wanted to ask how to safely upload them.
https://www.theverge.com/23934731/valetudo-robot-vacuum-hacking
Or you buy a cheap compatible robot and install valetudo
I have a linux phone on the shelf, because in real life I need apps that are only available on android ...
A stop job is running ... 3/180 s
try some https://www.opensourceseeds.org/en/home