

There’s a “US Gov protecting fossils” joke in there somewhere but I don’t really want to kick that hornets nest.
There’s a “US Gov protecting fossils” joke in there somewhere but I don’t really want to kick that hornets nest.
They were limiting their own production to raise demand and keep the price high, but then realized their competitors were benefiting from selling at those higher prices… so now they’re going to raise their own production and try undercut competitors on prices. They have the capacity to out-produce their competition, so they can afford to sell for slightly less than competitors if they want to, hence the "long and shallow” price war quote.
They are against low prices, but if anyone is buying low they want to be the one selling it.
Main character syndrome.
I’ve had no issues with Dash to Dock, this looks more like an ArcMenu issue to me based on your screenshot.
In the description for ArcMenu they say:
Requires GMenu package:
- Depending on your distro you may need to install ‘gir1.2-gmenu-3.0’, ‘gnome-menus’, or ‘libgnome-menu-3-0’
Have you got that dependency covered?
What other extensions do you have installed? What versions of Ubuntu and GNOME are you using?
every time I got lost in the ship builder, I’d spend an hour on some crazy design, be a piece away from saving it, and the game would just lock up and stop responding to input. Only ever happened in ship builder. I lost like 4 hours to that flippin’ bug!
I found Fallout 4 had good gameplay, but the main questline didn’t connect with me at all. I’m currently playing through Starfield at the moment, have like 220 hours playtime, I honestly wish I wasn’t finding it so boring but it’s easily the most bland Bethesda game I’ve ever played.
The story writing seems kinda half-arsed, but my main issue with Starfield is in the environments. Every location feels the same, and the planets are all just barren deserts with a random base and two caves plopped on it. At least Fallout 4’s environment felt hand-crafted, and not just like they rolled three dice.
What part of it do you connect with most?
Now try Starfield.
You’ll find it so shallow that Fallout 4 seems like the Mariana Trench.
I’m not doing this for approval.
Okay. Go away and do it then.
My monitors.xml has two <configuration>
blocks, with the only real difference being that one has <layoutmode>physical</layoutmode>
and the second has <layoutmode>logical</layoutmode>
. I don’t really think that’d be the issue here though, because if the dummy plug is listed as disabled it shouldn’t be trying to use it anyway…?
I think you’re right in reporting it to the GDM repo, at a minimum someone there will know where to point you towards figuring this out. Maybe the GNOME Mutter repo might be a related stop for this too, seeing that’s the part generating the monitors.xml…
The things that are supposed to be simple are always the bits that suck the most!
Yeah, seems like it should just be working…
You’ve probably already got this covered, but when you created your user monitors.xml
config, did you have the dummy plug connected and disabled?
Maybe the config:
When you copy over your monitor config, are you correcting the ownership/permissions?
The little scriptlet I made to combat a previous nvidia/wayland multi-monitor headache boils down to:
sudo cp $HOME/.config/monitors.xml /var/lib/gdm/.config/
sudo chown gdm:gdm /var/lib/gdm/.config/monitors.xml
Maybe double check if GDM is ignoring wayland as well, I’ve definitely had that happen in the past too.
Yeah, the Forgejo documentation was dreadful when I last looked, it really showed its origin as a Gitea replacement for people already using (and understanding) Gitea.
That’s cool. Any reason why you went with a self-hosted GitHub runner over making the full jump to a self-hosted Gitea instance + runner?
Maybe Linux just isn’t for you, and that’s okay. Go use Windows or Mac and enjoy your “just works” setup and lack of involuntary learning.
All the CDLC for RS2014 work by pretending to be the DLC for “Smashing Pumpkins - Cherub Rock”, because it was given away for free as a preorder. If you get any of the other delisted DLC, you can use Rocksmith Custom Song Toolkit to change the ID to one you own (free or paid, as long as you have a steam license for it) and it should work.
What I feel would be acceptable:
If you’re proud of your Framework laptop and want to brag about it, we’ll give you some swag for free that you can show off with when you’re out and about!
What this looked like to me:
If you’re attending a conference we’d be paid to attend, but can’t go to, will you show off your Framework laptop to attendees in an effort to convince them to buy one from us too, and we’ll send you some stickers?
The issue isn’t even what they’re asking for, but how their asking it.
When I last had an everyday carry USB stick (5+ years ago) I found I never actually used it for anything.
I had Ventoy and some practical ISOs, and PortableApps with a bunch of useful software (firefox, foobar2000, GIMP, notepad++…) for when I was using someone else’s Windows PC.
…think I stored like two word documents on it, ever.
The usual fix from the Jellyfin docs would be to check you file naming conventions, and add the TVDB or TMDB show ID to the folder so that it scrapes it correctly, or use the Identify option like @Rudee mentioned to select a better match from the UI after import.
Both TVDB and TMDB consider Pokémon Journeys to be Season 23 of the original Pokémon show, the OMDB seems to list it as a standalone show though, so you could import and match it against that metadata.
I definitely mis-read that as IKEA on first glance.