

Deadbeef comes the closest to what I want in a music player. If I could get rid of the playlist display at the bottom and edit tags, it would be perfect.


Deadbeef comes the closest to what I want in a music player. If I could get rid of the playlist display at the bottom and edit tags, it would be perfect.
I didn’t dislike it, but I don’t remember anything about it that would make me want to use it instead of Lutris.
I don’t, but it sounds cute, tbh.


I have a swap partition the size of my RAM, but I’ve never seen the system use more than maybe 4% of it. It’s more of an insurance policy than something that’s actually used on a regular basis.


I’ve gotta look into this. I’m not really satisfied with Ripcord.


Kali and Parrot were two separate distros last time I used Parrot.


I do this, but with simple text files, and I save it as “how to…” whatever I did. With comments inside explaining what and why. It’s great to help learn, IMO.


This is the only case in which I use timers, really, when I want something to run on startup, every once in a while, but only after it’s confirmed that the internet is up.


My system has timers, but I use cron anyway. It’s more simple, IMO.
I’ve done this many times. My bf hates seeing me sleeping on the dirty floor, but if I get in bed, I’ll be too comfortable and sleep for much longer than I want.
I thought most people replaced every part of Windows with something better, because none of it was very good.
I hate this. There’s nothing on my Github that’s so valuable it needs protection. It’s just a waste of time when I’m trying to make a bug report or something.


The Arch wiki is useful not matter what distro you’re on.


I’ve been using Tumbleweed for years, and it’s great.
Same. Or if there is a problem, I have no reason to believe it’s due to what browser I’m using. Sometimes there’s technical issues on the other end. Opening a support ticket can help get things straightened out.


That’s useful info, and something I didn’t think about before. I guess programs with a low bandwidth mode are your friend.


Good name.
Mine suspends immediately.
I installed Ubuntu decades ago, then moved and never used it again. The first distro I actually used was Peppermint. Loved it.
The software you use working correctly is kind of a big deal, though.