I remember I had over one hundred floppies to install it all. And those were just for the stuff I was interested in. This was circa 1996. I bought Red Hat 5.0 a year or so later. It came on 4 CD-ROM’s and was cheaper than that pile of floppies had been.
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My son’s Windows laptop did the same. Turns out there is a setting to make Windows truly shut down when selecting “shut down” from the menu, because normally it secretly sleeps or hibernates or something to have faster start-up times. There’s also the power another device via USB option that you may have to disable in BIOS / EFI settings.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Amazon's system marked an item I returned a year ago as not received and charged me for this return, but the chat bot already knew they had received it.English7·9 months agoJeez, are they still using mail pigeons?
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•When happy teams are an issue30·9 months agoBecause having more ticked boxes than the competition sells. Doesn’t matter if it’s of any relevance.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Threw a wrestling watch party, made special food, and was very disappointed in the outcome.English38·9 months agocut the cheese into cubes with individual toothpicks
Jeez, next time just use a knife my dude.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux during the mid to late 90s (Windows 95 and 98 era)2·11 months agoSo I downloaded slackware on dozens of disks.
This is no joke. When I downloaded Slackware in '95 or '96, it was over 100 3.5" floppies of 1.44 MB each. And there were still more available, those were just the ones I thought I’d need. And before you could even begin installing, each of those had to be downloaded, written and verified because floppies were not terribly reliable.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Web Development@programming.dev•Issue with website(personal project) loading on firefox, work fine on chrome.2·1 year agoFWIW, it’s working with FF 123 on Kubuntu as well.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Autism@lemmy.world•What meds do you use and how well do they work for you?English1·1 year agoFor me, it was taking vitamin B12 injections. Seriously.
If you have gut problems, chances are you have vitamin B12 deficiency and depression is a symptom of that. Why you have to figure that out for yourself after you get diagnosed is beyond me.
See also:
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Amsterdam testing system that can remotely slow e-bikes downEnglish2·1 year agoBut more importantly, e-bikes are supposed to have a speed limiter set to 25km/h anyway.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Full Stack Programmer Doing Frontend3·1 year agoAnd then a DBA comes in
I’m convinced that’s a mythical being. In my 20+ years of experience I’ve never encountered one.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Linux@lemmy.ml•I finally installed Linux, but I'm having a mixed experience3·1 year agoTransferring /home directory without reinstalling Linux?
After running low on storage space on Windows 10 I have considered upgrading to a larger drive, 2-4 TiB. With my switch to Linux I’d like to know if there is an easy way to take all my files from my previous drive into the new one with all the correct paths configured, without reinstalling Linux?
I can see this meaning a number of different things:
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you want to move your home directory to a separate partition: You can just create a new partition and move your stuff there. People have suggested rsync, and that’s fine. Personally, I’d use mc (midnight commander) for that because it’s easier.
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you want to know how to transfer your future home partition to a future bigger drive: You could do as above, or you could use clonezilla for that.
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you want to transfer files from your old Windows setup to your new Linux system: You can just mount an NTFS partition and do as described under point 1. I’d be wary to write to an NTFS partition, but reading from it works just fine.
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JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•People using 'less' when they should be using 'fewer'English1·1 year agoHmm, I’m fewer sure of that.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My daughter lost her social studies essay because LibreOffice doesn't have autosave on automatically.English1·1 year agoIt’s the sum total. SSD’s would have become the success they are today if it were localized.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My daughter lost her social studies essay because LibreOffice doesn't have autosave on automatically.English6·1 year agoCan confirm, have a cat and don’t have that issue. Because I lock the screen when leaving the machine unattended.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My daughter lost her social studies essay because LibreOffice doesn't have autosave on automatically.English21·1 year agoEven LibreOffice can only recover what has been saved. And if autosave is off, there might be less to recover than desirable. Again, that’s a UXD problem.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My daughter lost her social studies essay because LibreOffice doesn't have autosave on automatically.English1·1 year agoThat’s why I lock my machine before walking away. That’s <windows key> + L for those who don’t know.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My daughter lost her social studies essay because LibreOffice doesn't have autosave on automatically.English1·1 year agoBtw automatically saving is a generally undesirable feature as it could reduce the lifetime of ssds, slowdown the system if the file Is big or stored on slow media like network.
I don’t know what kind of files you write regularly, but even the smallest and cheapest PCIe 3.0 NVMe drive can store data at 600 megabytes per second or more. That’s plenty fast enough for my office documents at least. And you can rewrite the entire contents of the drive a hundred times or more before it fails. So I wouldn’t lose any sleep over having autosave on.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Linux@lemmy.ml•KDE's Nate Graham On X11 Being A Bad Platform & The Wayland Future81·1 year agoEventually people will have to get new hardware. That’s the moment to avoid nVidia, that’s how simple this can be.
Also, the problem is nVidia giving shitty Wayland support, not Wayland providing no nVidia support. It’s nVidia who has to write the drivers since they themselves opted to keep their implementation details a secret. There’s nothing the Wayland people can do except plea, beg and shame. If nVidia then decide not to care, then I say fuck them.
JaxNakamura@programming.devto Linux@lemmy.ml•Noob question: what to arrange before switching to linux1·2 years agoThat’s correct. It’s not just limited to computers or only two devices though.
Yeah, that sucks. You can have the best of both worlds in Linux by using the US keyboard with the “English (intl., with AltGr dead keys)” keyboard variant. This way, all your qwerty keys will work normally, but you can tell it a key combination is coming up by tapping AltGr. So you can for instance type <AltGr> + <"> + <u> to make ü or <AltGr> + <s> + <s> for ß. If I remember correctly, there is a way to make Windows do the same.
And in KDE at least, you can use any key you like to perform the function of AltGr. I suppose other DE’s can do the same.