I don’t know much,
…,
And that may be~~
All I need to know
I don’t know much,
…,
And that may be~~
All I need to know
I have my same finger scanned in 3 times dry and 5 times in varying degrees of wetness. Also two in pruny state. It mostly works. It’s a pixel 7a which has a shit finger reader so you may be able to get away with one of each.
Edit. Just in case I’ll clarify that the system thinks I registered 10 fingerprints but it’s all my thumb.
I use it on my steam deck microsd to cram more shit in via compression. Main drive is left as ext4 though so case folding can be used for particularly janky windows games or mods.
Russia is pretty weird and all over the place lately
It does though…
I used Manjaro for several years but it requires so much manual intervention on updates that don’t work. Just straight arch or endeavor would be easier in the long run imo. I use tumbleweed on my current main computer though.
Opensuse and a couple other distros I tested can do this too right out of the notification panel which is thankfully easy enough for my parents and grandparents. I still end up using the “quake style terminal” most of the time and just flatpak through the notification sometimes.
I can’t even bring myself to use the gui update tools on distros that have them. It just feels like doing anything with extra weight strapped on to every limb.
In the Intel core 2 era I played with doing this and trying to have the kernel and software all optimized and compiled for the specific hardware of the specific computer I was using and the performance gains if any were negligible.
I’d lean towards no.
Found someone probably around the same age as me lol.
I got CompTIA a+ when the exam had windows XP specific questions. Maybe it still does, I dunno. Anyways in the jobs I applied for nobody had even heard of it. The interviewers were mostly professional interviewers and not IT staff as far as I could tell though. I also ended up hating IT work which always had an infinite supply of clueless managers in every job.
My recommendation is check if you have a local ink/toner shop and see what their refill prices are for the toner cartridges. I chose my printers based on being cheap to continually use and the quality is good enough for me.
If I was nearly as in to gaming as I was back in the day I would dust off and raise my jolly old flag.
I have a kindle I got in 2020 and no idea where it is. I also have a Kobo Libra 2 that I take with me everywhere. If you don’t want to constantly battle with jailbreaking get a Kobo. The two books I have on Amazon I transferred on with calibre and dedrm plugin
There are a few ways I can think of to do this but I’m not sure what would be the best way.
You can just mount individual drives or partitions to the corresponding location (xdg directories or otherwise). This is what I generally do.
I haven’t tried this but If you don’t want to partition the shared drives, you could make corresponding folders on the root of the drive (or anywhere really) and bind mount those folders to the corresponding location. For it to be persistent across reboots, a brief search says you can put it in fstab this way: /source /destination none defaults,bind 0 0 There is also rbind which I think is recursive but I haven’t read up on when to use it.
I haven’t tried this either and forget which is which but symbolic link or hard link may or may not be viable and would also be persistent I think.
Still could be considered a work around and may require pirating but this exists
https://github.com/openblack/openblack
I haven’t tried it myself yet though since the setup seems like a bit of a hassle.
This is really silly but that’s probably a good thing
I’m to old to have thought of submitting an ai essay in school lol
This reads like a high school essay made in the absolute last minute before it was due and the kid couldn’t come up with anything worthwhile to write about.
I’ve never found this to be a problem. I’ve also never experienced poop burn after eating spicy things but instead got it from misc other food that upset my stomach.