I just delete every user but root.
- 3 Posts
- 102 Comments
I was trying to sudo rm -rf ./ Once and missed the / so I just used rm -rf . And this was before they added --no-preserve-root as a default so it just ripped through my entire drive.
stupidcasey@lemmy.worldto
Memes@lemmy.ml•I implore you to stop using the drake meme template
23·13 days agoFollowing this trajectory the next step will be to reject the new meme in favor of the old one.
stupidcasey@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•"how do i install this on Linux?" "thats the neat part. you dont."
1·17 days agoFrom my experience if it requires this it was installed through a different method and is already being auto updated and when you run that it just fails and still shows up in the list, your experience may vary but you can solve that by uninstalling it and installing it through winget if you really care enough to uninstall it
stupidcasey@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•"how do i install this on Linux?" "thats the neat part. you dont."
38·17 days agoWinget update --all
You use base 4, I use base (4+1)*2
stupidcasey@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The beginner of tutorial hell
22·28 days agoI disagree, you should start with what you want to do no matter how challenging, figure out on a high level what it takes eg what stack you’ll be using, figure out how they connect together then start at your first entree point, or in other words the one you can directly interact with, it saves you a lot of time down the road to actually have something to build to and prevents you from getting overwhelmed and you get immediate feedback which is nice.
stupidcasey@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The beginner of tutorial hell
4·28 days agoYes but you think you know everything and isn’t that what really matters?
True the enigma machine didn’t work like that on its default firmware, but if you convert the voltage to a compatible ~0.9V and solder in a simple 32-bit silicon translation chip and melt the rest of the machine down for a case you could theoretically get it working.
Ok technically but why couldn’t we keep a stable explicit hierarchy without breaking compatibility or relying on symlinks and assumption?
In other words
Why not /system/bin, /system/lib, /apps/bin.
Or why not keep /bin as a real directory forever
Or why force /usr to be mandatory so early?
Could you not just use subdirectories?
Can anyone explain to me why it was so important to break the Linux file system?
Like I believe it was since literally every single distribution did it, but I don’t get why it was so important that we had to make things incompatible unless you know what you are doing.
Just checking, you looked to dumb to understand.
Sure… But do you use it?
Fattest, loneliest, smelliest, basement livingest mofo this world has ever seen:
Struts up.
Squeezes right between.
Forces them to the adjacent urinals.
Adjusts glasses taped together.
Clears voice through braces that should have been removed years ago.
In an authoritative weezy voice.
I use LFS by the way.
Sorry by the way I have not used Debian in many years, it has gone by the wayside, I now use a different unnamed Operating System by the way.
sudo apt-get Gud.
Y’all need to install Arch, you learn all the basics pretty much instantly… That or drown when you can’t install the boot loader.
That’s gotta be like actually illegal unless cloud flair is to blame and then how did they reach your server?


Dang it i changed
import(math)To
import(MC.Escher)Again