

Magic Earth search isn’t that good neither. I use GMaps-WV to get the adress then, once clipped in memory, it opens MagicEarth automatically/
Magic Earth search isn’t that good neither. I use GMaps-WV to get the adress then, once clipped in memory, it opens MagicEarth automatically/
Is it? I’ve just tried and it doesn’t:
❯ yt-dlp "https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/album/2NsGk9oBBBMfblYdLcjYhu"
[generic] Extracting URL: https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/album/2NsGk9oBBBMfblYdLcjYhu
[generic] 2NsGk9oBBBMfblYdLcjYhu?si=5c3b12c1e70948a6: Downloading webpage
[redirect] Following redirect to https://open.spotify.com/album/2NsGk9oBBBMfblYdLcjYhu
[DRM] Extracting URL: https://open.spotify.com/album/2NsGk9oBBBMfblYdLcjYhu
ERROR: [DRM] The requested site is known to use DRM protection. It will NOT be supported.
Please DO NOT open an issue, unless you have evidence that the video is not DRM protected
Radicale is indeed excellent. Light and safe. I use it for an association!
You have to use two swaps if you already use one swap, because one will be used when the system is on, but the second will be used to set the RAM content + the 1st content into SWAP (if any), otherwise, it would fail.
Then, find the hibernation swap uuid:
sudo swapon --show
lsblk -o name,uuid
Then
# /etc/default/grub
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="resume=UUID=xxxx"
#/etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume
resume=UUID=xxxx
# bash
sudo update-grub
sudo update-initramfs -k all -u
# to hibernate on lid switch
# /etc/systemd/logind.conf
HandleLidSwitch=hibernate
Then reboot :)
Note: this method works wonderfully, I use it personally. Just be aware that the hibernation swap content is not encrypted, so you’re vulnerable if your laptop is stolen while hibernated.
This! Debian with Gnome or others is the answer. Take an afternoon to make it yours, then forget it. You can use backported kernels on Debian, to support newer hardware. Try this or upgrade to Debian 13 right now by changing the sourcefile to trixie instead of bookworm. Note : if you use Gnome, let gnome-software handle the updates for you (there’s an equivalent for kde). If you use others, configure unattented-upgrades for automatic updates.
As a 6700XT owner, I use 4k@60Hz (my screens can’t do better anyway). Does that mean I would need to use DisplayPort for better output in the future?
For reference, I have a 6700XT on a 4k videoprojector, and it’s fluid for 4k video and games (but it’s a gaming card). The drivers are excellent and the card is stable. Thus said, I read some web videos through mpv, which is more optimized. On Youtube 4k, it works as well. I’ve tried 8k downsized and it was bit laggy, so I don’t think a 6400 is enough for 8k video. I also had to buy a HDMI cable with more throughput! Videos aside, I think it’s okay for the display only (texts and images), but wait for another reviewer because the 6400 is less powerful, so I can’t confirm. However, if it works on Windows, it will work on Linux.
I use FreshRSS since a few years and it’s excellent!
gammastep
I’m glad that it has fixed your problem. Enjoy :)
Use virt-manager (with KVM). Learn how to install guest tools, then enjoy the performance!
Activate it as shown in the comments!
Have you checked the flags in wpa_supplicant? Some routers have non-default encryption schemes.
From my notes, use these USE flags as a test: net-wireless/wpa_supplicant wps wep ap fasteap eap-sim tkip uncommon-eap-types
I’m pretty sure this is your problem :)
Switch to Debian and you’ll be fine :)
For links, I use Pocket (you can use Wallabag, but I find the interface not efficient at all). For files, you can sync a folder with syncthing (but you only switch it on when you want a quick sync, otherwise keep it off for battery). If you just want to put some file on your phone, install FTP server (free) from F-droid and switch it on when you need it (there’s even an optional switch on quick actions). Use Filezilla or any file browser (if on Linux) to exchange your files. Remember to switch the server off once finished, because FTP is not a secure protocol.
Nextcloud was too slow and bloated for me. I used Seafile for years and it was fine, but at some point I went to some more simple setup : sftpgo to share folders (sftp, dav) and syncthing for the folders I want to sync between devices. You can also set ignore lists in syncthing to ignore large dirs. Keep it simple stupid 😅
This can happen with people that refuse to learn!
I use encryption on laptops, because they can be stolen in the train, bus, etc. On work desktop, I do so as well, because there are many people around. However, on everything that stay at home, I prefer not to use it to simplifiy things and get more performance.
Exactly, it isn’t permissive (like OSM, as you said). There should be some natural language research here.