

Can you use pkill -f with the full command line? Or is it the same for all AppRun.wrapped processes?


Can you use pkill -f with the full command line? Or is it the same for all AppRun.wrapped processes?


Keywords that you can put into your favorite search engine: archive.is ddos.


I’m not familiar with pipewire, but is there a mixer somewhere in the pipe?
If nobody has a better idea, you could create a loop device with a HFS filesystem, copy the CD to that filesystem, replace all bad filenames, then copy everything to a normal filesystem.
Edit: apparently there’s a --iconv option in rsync: https://askubuntu.com/a/540960


I use SMS/RCS. Not everyone uses Signal, and I won’t install WhatsApp.


But the US can impose a few inconviniences on you:


I have to use Windows at work, but I can use WSL on the developer laptop. Also I develop for/on Linux servers via ssh, so it’s good that I know Linux from home.
You forgot the -print0 at the end of the find command. In the read -r -d '' you want to read NUL-separated strings, so you must tell the find command to also use NUL characters between the filenames.


I found uPnP is not advised due to security risk
There are different uPnP things: one that lets apps open ports in your router (security risk) and one with media renderer (safe).
You said you/I/everyone can use multiple shells, I said: no, I can’t, at least not on all the machines that I have to use.
Some people work on machines where they are not allowed to install anything.
There’s jc (CLI tool and python library that converts the output of popular command-line tools, file-types, and common strings to JSON, YAML, or Dictionaries).
If you’re not allergic to Amazon, a FireTV stick might be enough, at least for Jellyfin, Youtube/Netflix etc. (not sure about streaming from the browser).


This article was amended on 8 March 2025. The Athena craft touched down 250 meters, not 250 miles, from its intended landing site.
I just looked, and Chimera also offers distrobox. I didn’t have the need to really use it yet, but it sounds like it would be the best because of its desktop integration.


From Wikipedia:
The company has licensed the Kodak brand to several products produced by other companies, such as the PIXPRO line of digital cameras manufactured by JK Imaging. https://petapixel.com/2013/01/23/kodak-brand-license-holder-jk-imaging-shrouded-in-mystery/
And why do I want this? And if I want this, why is it not the default already? SSDs have been mainstream for ten years I guess, so shouldn’t any current Linux installer do the right thing by now?