

Maybe I’d want that for email, but frankly I check that often enough that even that isnt needed. I consider phone notification management to be a chore, why would I ever want to add that chore to my desktop?
DaGeek247 of https://dageek247.com/
Maybe I’d want that for email, but frankly I check that often enough that even that isnt needed. I consider phone notification management to be a chore, why would I ever want to add that chore to my desktop?
fstrim.service is disk tool (that’s supposed to only be run once a week, not every time you boot) that automatically cleans up old deleted SSD data. https://opensource.com/article/20/2/trim-solid-state-storage-linux
It looks like it’s running too often, or on the wrong devices, every time you boot your computer. You can actually safely disable it; https://askubuntu.com/questions/1165128/fstrim-is-causing-high-boot-time but it’s worth looking into why it’s taking so long and being run so often.
Running this should show you the log results of fstrim doing it’s thing without actually doing anything;
sudo fstrim --fstab --verbose --dry-run
These two will show the status of fstrim and it’s autorun service;
systemctl status fstrim
systemctl status fstrim.timer
I got most of this from a quick google search; https://duckduckgo.com/?q=fstrim.service+systemd+slow You can do the same for the other major time-takers on your boot list. For comparison, here’s the top results of my semi-fresh install of linux mint;
dageek247@mintPC:~$ systemd-analyze blame 2.237s NetworkManager-wait-online.service 2.077s systemd-binfmt.service 2.003s systemd-resolved.service 1.976s systemd-timesyncd.service 1.916s fwupd-refresh.service 1.365s logrotate.service 1.326s NetworkManager.service 933ms fwupd.service 401ms blueman-mechanism.service 334ms udisks2.service 263ms apt-daily-upgrade.service 254ms dpkg-db-backup.service 229ms dev-nvme0n1p3.device 215ms accounts-daemon.service 201ms power-profiles-daemon.service 199ms polkit.service 197ms smartmontools.service 183ms rsyslog.service 173ms ubuntu-system-adjustments.service 169ms systemd-udev-trigger.service 156ms user@1000.service 155ms proc-sys-fs-binfmt_misc.mount 146ms ModemManager.service 132ms apparmor.service 123ms avahi-daemon.service 121ms bluetooth.service 114ms grub-common.service 111ms lm-sensors.service 106ms switcheroo-control.service 105ms secureboot-db.service
That’s androids fault. Their login input detection is spotty, and has been for a while now. https://9to5google.com/2024/10/06/android-autofill-password-manager-problems/
I’m at two as well. Finasteride for hair, and vitamin D because my doctor recommended it.
I had thought the vitamin D pill was actually kinda useless when i first started taking it. I was fine before i started taking the pill, right? Due to me being lazy and prescription address changes lagging behind a move, I ended up skipping out on that pill for two months. Turns out, vitamin D is like, a minor anti depressant or some shit because I was exhausted all the time near the end there before I started retaking the pill.
Honestly, this one. Handbrake was made as a wrapper for ffmpeg anyways.
It’s not the “native” defines how or when you learned to speak a language. It’s that how and when you learned a language that makes it “native”.
As a bonus, since this is English, “native language” also changes definition based on context. If you are filling out a form and they are asking demographical information, your native language is Cantonese. If you are filling out a resume and want to describe how well you speak English, then you can read/write English at the native level.
If you are in a casual conversation and someone asks what your native language is, then your answer will likely include a whole or part of the above story, to avoid confusion and to encourage more discussion. Essentially, both Cantonese and English fit your “native language” definition in that context.
#13 I LIKE BIG BUTTS AND I CANNOT LIE
Fun fact! This abbreviation is so widespread that even government forms use it! They very specifically added the -ez suffix to show that this version is less of a pain in the ass to fill out compared to the old one.
In a GitHub ticket viewed by WIRED, Lavingia also suggested abandoning Drupal, a content management system (CMS) that the VA uses for publishing updates and information about the agency and the services it provides on VA facility websites. “I think we should consider removing Drupal as part of our workflow, and all content should just live in the codebase,” he wrote.
Sources say that the regular office administrators and health workers staffed at VA locations around the country are often the ones responsible for making sure that the content about their facilities are clear and up to date on their VA webpages. Instead of being able to log in to the CMS and update the appropriate text or pages, Lavingia’s suggestion would mean they’d need to go into the actual code of the website to make simple changes. Any mistakes could break the sites, and one source worried that such a technical task would be too big of an ask for nontechnical VA staffers.
Man they just keep trying to fuck shit up, don’t they?
It means “cool, but a lot of people would disagree, and you’re brave for saying so”.
The second half of the article talks about how the apps get around this permission requirement.
Usually they just disable all the hdmi ports except for cable and don’t bother to lock the final hdmi port to a specific device. So long as you have a long hdmi cable and nimble hands, it’s not too much effort to just pull out the cable hdmi and put in your own.
Oh man, have you seen the state of new -INSERT MODERN DEVICE HERE- lately? Apparently nobody got the memo.
Economies of scale can make the math seem really wild at the higher end.
Directly to the clients from the already self-hosted server, exactly like all the other media hosting software does. Lmao.
Yeah, I saw that one pretty quick and wondered why they did that. Mailbox.org is a better option than just putting ‘thunderbird’.
Y’all act like your stank is better than cigarette but it really fucking isn’t.
they need an anti-bullshit step that doesn’t currently exist.
This will never exist in a complete form. Wikipedia doesn’t have this solved; randomly generated heuristics will certainly never have it either.
I think it’s iphone stage. We’ve had predictive text in some form or other for a long time now. But that’s just LLMs. Can’t speak for the image/video generators, but I expect those will become another tool in the box that gets better but does the same thing.
I just can’t see a whole lot of improvement in these products making any changes top how we use them already.
There’s a name I haven’t heard in a while. My parents and older siblings had juno email addresses through our ISP way back in the day. If you check their website they’re still not on https yet.