ranger is another good one. I very rarely end up using a terminal file manager though.
ranger is another good one. I very rarely end up using a terminal file manager though.
Worth pointing out that while ventoy is open source, iventoy is not. Might be important to some people.
They are usually released at the end of the year.
But when you say “24.04” it sounds like you are asking when the next Ubuntu LTS is released?
I don’t think anyone is saying he got the position because of his sexual position, but rather that he got it regardless of it. It’s just some uplifting news that some countries have progressed enough to the point where a (voting) majority of the population don’t mind an openly gay head of state.
I think head of state refers to presidents/kings/queens depending on the type of state.
Can confirm as another Memmy user.
I agree for the most part but it doesn’t entirely defeat the purpose. If someone got a hold of your password for a website it would still protect you. And let’s be honest, that’s the most likely scenario. But yes if someone got into your password manager then it’s completely game over. A scenario where having a separate 2fa device would still protect you.
The fact that someone like Biden and Bernie exist in the same party tells you how awful the 2-party system is.
As usual the Arch wiki is one of the best resources for this. Not everything is applicable on Debian but should answer most questions. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface/Secure_Boot
Thank you so much!
Depending on your desktop environment you can probably overwrite what that keyboard combination does to prevent that from happening.
Please share that wallpaper, looks awesome!
Alright that’s cool! So if you wanna stay testing beta versions then don’t do anything, and if you want stable builds then move over to the App Store version.
Move over. Usually TestFlight will stop getting updates when the App Store version is out.
Debian is great. It’s basically Ubuntu (it also uses apt for example) but bit more traditional. In fact it’s probably one of the most popular distros used in servers when you don’t need the support that someone like Redhat can give you especially as a business. And if you can’t live without “snaps” then you can install snapd on Debian.
I was distrohopping for like a year or two when I first got into Linux desktop. As soon as I installed Arch for the first time that stopped. Now the thought of a distro pre-installing packages gives me the heebie jeebies. You don’t get to tell me how I sync with NTP servers!
Would you mind sharing the finished version? I love it 😊