

vi, since it’s ubiquitous.
refugee from lemmy.sdf.org


vi, since it’s ubiquitous.


apt just quietly “keeps back” the package. It doesn’t fail, it doesn’t break the system, and it doesn’t trigger a rollback. It just waits for me to notice. Since I wasn’t looking at the list of upgradable packages
Depends on what quietly means. To me it means “with no indication”. Any written warning is quiet, I guess, if one is not reading it.


I prefer it over stock debian and normal mint.
I normally run debian but I ran LMDE for a couple years and thought it was nice.
The sexual usage is from gay bdsm subculture in the 70s that the large majority of ppl who are aware of it are only aware because of Pulp Fiction.
I had heard gimp/gimpy used to mean “limping or is otherwise gait-impaired” often enough that I assumed the Pulp Fiction character was called the Gimp because of his posture and gait. I was completely unaware of any scene/subculture meaning until reading threads like these.
Full disclosure about my own experience: I am a disabled person who has no strong emotional reaction to the term. I do limp, some days worse than others.
If the name were the problem then why doesn’t someone fork the project and change only the name? <- actual question, not trying to be a smartass
In either case they are starting from ~zero name recognition.


Only people I’ve seen buy ram trucks are ones who do not care about others and want to be seen as big and tuff.
The brodozer phenomenon is real and lamentable.
At the moment I am getting a reprieve from it. I moved to a small agricultural town* where the pickups are actually work trucks. Hay bales, animal feed bags, and farm dogs in the bed. It makes this grinch’s heart grow a little larger.
*actually just a Census Designated Place


between 2AM and 6AM internet would start dropping packets like crazy
about 20 years ago I was remotely troubleshooting a microwave connectivity problem that occurred at a clients workplace about 10pm each night. Lasted about an hour. There was no one at work then but data transfers between their server and the mothership would fail.
One night the client went to the site at night to check an alarm and noticed there was a bobtail truck parked next to the building. The aero deflector attachment on its roof blocked line-of-sight with the tower, causing the problem. He asked the driver to nap at some other location in the parking lot and the problem went away.


I feel crazy for thinking it is correlated to do bad weather, as if that should somehow affect my indoor WiFi quality…
well, if it’s raining more people might stay indoors on their wifi, exacerbating any channel interference problems
ARM is perfect for this, but does Linux play nice with it?
to paraphrase the saying, “Millions of Raspberry Pi can’t be wrong”
When you do aliased commands, can they take arguments? Like to download a playlist with yt-dlp, could i do download-playlist [URL]?
They don’t take arguments in the sense that functions do but in bash at least they are passed on as part of the expanded string. Pasted from bash:
alias argtest='echo arg is'
argtest foo
arg is foo
So yes you could alias your yt-dlp commands and invoke the alias with the URL.
If you have been using Linux for +10 years, what are you using now?
I distro-hopped every few years until about 2015. Since then I’ve been trending toward Debian for everything.


That’s the one I use, too. Works fine.


I’m honestly regularly shocked at how many people use Chrome on Linux.
I generally prefer to run firefox (ESR) on my debian machines. But I regularly open a couple dozen tabs during a research session and sometimes FF eats eat all my RAM (16GB), then swap, then locks up the machine. If I catch the degradation before lockup sometimes I can kill enough tabs to recover. I had a few of those lockups last month before I got tired of it.
So for now I’ve swapped back to chromium to get around that problem. Same behavior on my part, ~same extensions, but chromium’s RAM usage stays sane.


for the first time someone has contributed to the code. This may seem trivial, but it is important to me
I’d definitely feel good about that!


I just don’t make a habit of visiting any particular website to read it. That’s what the threadiverse is for.
Alternatively: that’s what RSS is for.
I’m a noob and I prefer… Debian?
The beauty of linux is you get to run whatever you prefer. Have fun and be productive in the way you like. :-)
In the past I’ve mainly used XFCE or openbox because of my old hardware. A couple years ago I picked a Debian+MATE image to install on a fresh box and have been using it by default since then.
None of that “touchscreen UI uber alles” BS.


There is no claim or language that indicates it’s anything else.
Agreed, the SSA itself is not making claims that mislead the public.
Police however are prompted up by things like “protect and serve”
I agree that’s a problem.
a lot of other language/guidance/media to be portrayed as protectors, when that’s not necessarily the case.
I don’t want to beat the dead horse, but IMO the public language/guidance/media discourse regarding the SSA is as misleading as “to protect and to serve”.
If I were pushed I might say that the security part of social security is an implied guarantee that it will provide security of some kind. It does bolster financial security for many at the moment, but there is no guarantee it will do in the future.


Yet they demand our obedience and cooperation.
And people willingly bootlick these brave heroes who “f34r for muh life!!!” and start blasting when an acorn falls. Or when they step in front of a moving vehicle.
I’ve had it fail (ie, stay on and deplete the battery) often enough over the years that I just suspend/hibernate manually before closure.