Everything here reminds everyone of that.
Everything here reminds everyone of that.
It wasn’t anything big that caused me to switch. It was just a general feeling of “oh, maybe I’ll switch” and annoyance at Windows, and then I got a new SSD.
Here’s a few of the micro-hacks that I’ve hacked up in the past.
#!/bin/sh
clear
doas chroot /linux /bin/login
ide
which runs Vim, and then compiles the code and makes it executable. #!/bin/sh
#Works only for C
vim $1.c && cc -O3 -Wall -Werror -Wno-unused-result $1.c -o $1
#MODE=`stat -f "%OLp" $1`
if ("stat -f "%OLp" $1 | grep -e 6 -e 4 -e 2") then
chmod +x $1
fi
demoronize
, which does what it says in the comments #!/bin/sh
#dos2unix -O -e -s $1 | sed 's/ / /g' | sed 's/“/"/g' | sed 's/”/"/g'
cat $1 | sed 's/ / /g' | sed 's/“/"/g' | sed 's/”/"/g'
#Convert DOS line endings to Unix ones and add a final newline if there isn't one,
#replace sequence of 4 spaces with tab,
#and replace "smart" quotes with normal ones
I just keep those ones for historical value, but there’s one hack I use every day. My keyboard doesn’t have a function key (Fn), so I use the Super/Windows key instead.
I have xdotool keyup Super_L keyup Super_R keyup F4 key XF86Sleep
bound to a custom keyboard shortcut. It unpresses the keys used for the shortcut (Super + F4), then presses the sleep key.
Damn Taskbar is gold
What is unclutter
?
And your first pet’s name, and your social security number
Not really trying to accomplish much, just trying to save a few seconds in the manual installation process.
Mounting /var/log in RAM just seems like more trouble than it’s worth.
What if I’m on another minimal distro, like Artix, that doesn’t use systemd? Journald is a systemd thing, and I’m not going to install systemd on top of a perfectly good init system.
What if I’m on another minimal distro, like Artix, that doesn’t use systemd? Journald is a systemd thing, and I’m not going to install systemd on top of a perfectly good init system.
Today on “Was this caused by stupidity or malice”…
Microsoft said earlier this month it would apply “a Secure Boot Advanced Targeting (SBAT) update to block vulnerable Linux boot loaders that could have an impact on Windows security,”
(emphasis mine)
That is a cool app.
Linux Mint has Xpad for sticky notes.
Mousepad? The standard text editor on XFCE?
Vista on one machine, 10 on another.
Vista was actually good, it just started running slow because the computer was old. Switched to Mint and Lubuntu, those ran faster.
I got a new computer, and went, gasp… BACK TO WINDOWS! Kept planning the switch to Linux for years, because I liked the operating system, then got an SSD and just did it. Installed OpenSUSE, currently on Debian.
The hardware was really outdated at this point, so I got a new machine. Windows 8.1.
Got a different new computer with Windows 10. Started trying out lots of distros of VMs.
tldr: Windows Vista -> Mint -> Lubuntu -> Mint again -> Windows 8.1 (new computer) -> Windows 10 (new computer) -> OpenSUSE Leap -> Debian -> FreeBSD -> OpenSUSE Tumbleweed -> Debian again
Got a source about Adguard? I use it on my phone, and I don’t get any ads.
That explains… some
Upvoted solely for the last line