- 9 Posts
- 75 Comments
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•What problems does Linux have to overcome to get more users17·5 days agoThat’s more depressing than I can handle
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•[anecdote] You learn something new every day with linux4·3 months ago“Jokingly, don’t worry” come on man you’re not walking on egg shells just by saying something negative
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto KDE@lemmy.kde.social•[Question/Request] How to disable Autoscroll in Okular?1·4 months agoThe autoscroll you’re talking about is indeed one of Okular’s features.
I don’t see it anywhere. You sure it’s present? It only zooms by middle-mouse clicking in Okular
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto KDE@lemmy.kde.social•[Question/Request] How to disable Autoscroll in Okular?1·4 months agoI thought autoscroll was the feature to scroll with middle-mouse clicking, which opens a scroll icon. Or is this called differently
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is this how alphabetical order is supposed to be? Nemo file manager31·9 months agoI see, but wouldn’t it make more “human readable sense” to order spaces before any other character? Any human working with analog archives would rank 5 A before 5.5 A, since they think 5 is 5.0 in their head
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is this how alphabetical order is supposed to be? Nemo file manager84·9 months agoyes yes I get what you’re saying but it’s still odd. Didn’t humans do this differently in the old analog days? I’m sure any human when working with a real paper archive in front of him, order 5 A before 5.5 A. Perhaps it has something to do with viewing 5 as 5.0 and 5.00, since they are mathematically equivalent, and come before 5.5. Although humans would also be inconsistent because they would order 5.9 before 5.11 if the context were to be chapters going from 5.9 -> 5.10 -> 5.11. But if these papers were to represent values, humans would order 5.9 AFTER 5.11. And computers obviously don’t make exceptions based on context like humans do.
edit: if I understand correctly, I’d be cleaner if spaces come come first in character ranking of ANY character. Perhaps that’d make it more human readable.
This is the most unhinged shit I ever read
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•What Linux distro without opt-out telemetry would you recommend a Manjaro user?42·9 months agoI think maybe Fedora but probably less software available
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•HP Laptop drains battery while turned off23·11 months agoIt may be exactly this, noticed by Linus Tech Tips: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHKKcd3sx2c
If their solutions don’t work, try this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JoFi5yXzZk
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto KDE@lemmy.kde.social•#Kdenlive 24.08.1 is out and we urge all to upgrade. This version fixes recent playback and render regressions while fixing a wide range of bugs.11·11 months agoDoes it not randomly crash anymore?
Why is /mnt a “temporary” mounting point? I alwags put my permanent ones there. I’d say /media is temporary…
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•How dare you use a text editor because it's easy to use1·11 months agoSadly I don’t remember. Sometimes it comes preinstalled, sometimes not, depending on OS or something. (Maybe Manjaro gnome). I could copy and paste inside of vim, but not to/from outside vim.
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•How dare you use a text editor because it's easy to use1·11 months agoSo I need to dive into the manual to do something as basic and universal as “copy and paste”? Why not make it Ctrl+shift+c or have it shown in the info text when pressing this almost universally accepted keypairs? Or at least make it somewhat similar to this. I find it bonkers why some programs decide to just have radically different shortcuts or defaults, the complete opposite of what feels intuitive. Same with the design of some doors that need actual SIGNS on them to tell you which direction they open. Just bad design choice.
Edit: just remembered. Same story with tmux. Want to copy something? Surprise, it’s not anything you expect it to be. Some ctrl+b + [ or some shit
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•How dare you use a text editor because it's easy to use124·1 year agoFor vim I had to config or install something just to be able to COPY something to use outside vim, how backwards is that? Isn’t this the most standard feature one can expect to work as default?
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•why can't I connect to my ssh server UNLESS I enter eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" first?1·1 year agoNo unfortunately not… Would’ve been a real pain.
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•why can't I connect to my ssh server UNLESS I enter eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" first?2·1 year agoHey that works too! Same effect as my previous workaround, that I just posted yesterday.
I do have to repeat this command everytime, so I had to put it into ~/.zshrc so it’s executed beforehand in every new terminal.
It still does feel lile a workaround since it ‘resets’ itself (as I said) with every new terminal.
dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•why can't I connect to my ssh server UNLESS I enter eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" first?1·1 year agoI am not sure I “solved” this but when I add this to my startup script for my terminal (~/.zshrc):
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-agent-$USER-socket export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
it works then. I am not sure I’m still using the ssh agent, but at least it also does not cache my passphrase/private key
You can call Microsoft? I thought Microsoft called me