Gnucash but I’ve been using it for like 7+ years and I’m kind of set in my ways now
Gnucash but I’ve been using it for like 7+ years and I’m kind of set in my ways now


Stupid question.
Does this apply to what you write and upload on the Arduino IDE to your boards? Or just whatever you publish on their website/ cloud?


Im oldschool and use Gnucash


Not long after this post, BentoPDF made an appearance


Having just installed StirlingPDF this week, can someone please explain the pros and cons of both?


So many different questions here. However…
A knife can be used to kill but also cook a nice meal.
Is it worth stating which companies own which vpns? I saw a TIL that mentions a select few companies own most VPNs
Does it grant “backdoor” access?


They do? I dont recalling having needed to pay for it and dont need to log in. I even have a degoogled phone… maybe it used to be free


My experience has been OSMAnd feels “heavy”. It is a large app but i guess there’s so much it just feels sluggish. But it has the most features which I use as my go to reference.
Organic maps (and CoMaps) feels sleeker and quicker but when im on the road I want traffic updates.
For the last few years my go to is Magic Earth for the traffic data.
My issues with OSM is a lot of missing information and incorrect roads. I have contributed updates but when I’m driving and I come across something wrong there’s no way for me to flag it so i can revisit it later.
All in all I’m still torn between them all and still waiting for the day one ticks all the boxes.
More often than not I find I end up using Google Maps to get me out of a wrong or missing turn or to the final destination because finding places on OSM isn’t there yet. If OSM gets something wrong when I’m driving I don’t have time to faff around trying to fix it so GMaps takes over the rest of the way and I dislike having to do so


Gotta find something to sell to stay afloat. Why not user data? /s


Ulnar Nerve AKA Funny Bone


Check out PrivacyGuides. They have recommendations for DNS including what others have commented
Codium. It’s VSCode without the proprietary stuff


They meant they cant “WEAR” the sticker because its already been stuck on the paper it came with
I find if I have NTFS problems, throw it back on windows, do a disk repair then come back to Linux.
Also remember to fully shut down (not sleep or hibernate) windows before removing the disk so windows doesn’t lock up anything
Edit: the error actually tells you the latter of what I mentioned… So back to windows you go for a shutdown before removal


Most people have answered doing a rollback is the best way. I usually find some updates break things then later updates dont have the issues.
But I wanted to add if you go in to yast snapshots and double click a snapshot you can actually select specific changes to rollback via checkboxes. I’ve not tried this yet though because of dependencies and whatnot


Lemmistan


Thunderbird on OpenSUSE
distrobox?