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deleted by creator
Counterpoint: I am too young to understand this technology, it scares me, and I am unwilling to learn.
I’ve never installed fedora specifically but…
Anyway I created a free 900GB ext4 partition
It’s either ext4 or free, can’t be both. Now, if it was ext4, Fedora would for sure detect it as such, so I’m not sure what it is.
I assume you would want to click on sda6 in the installer, then the “-” button to delete whatever is there, and then it would recognize it as available space.
Check my other comment. sda6 is there.
sda6 is the fourth one (after sda3) in the list on the bottom picture. The partitions seem to be physically in that order, but labeled differently, as they were created. You can reorder the labels but it’s also fine left alone AFAIK.
They host their own marketplace. It doesn’t have everything, but it’s trivial to install any extension from a .vsix file. Unless you use 50 and need to update them…
Not to dissect a meme too hard but I’m pretty sure the ram is supposed to go pins down into the potato.
Net upgrade size: -0.01MiB
OOOH YEAH! Now that’s how you debloat.
Any self-respecting distro pushed an update to fix this days ago, so just updating (and restarting cups) will do. But if you don’t print anyway, you might as well disable it.
I can get you a Mint CD key for 15€ or Arch for 2€. DM me.
Gonna be honest, I don’t think I ever read that. I think I usually just do git status
immediately after to see if all’s well.
Still the default in git.
The default for git repositories is still master. Not to be the “real programmers only use CLI” guy, but I feel like git init
isn’t too hipster.
Yeah. The protonvpn-gtk-app (or something like that) AUR package works fine, though. Really barebones but does the job.
As long as it’s in your list, your client keeps a copy of the torrent file around somewhere.
Am I trippin’? Did nobody click the link? Are there several more layers of irony I have never even heard of? It’s 72 seconds.
In this case definitely the first. Just make a new directory (name doesn’t matter: SATA, Files, data…) and use your distro’s tool to change the mount point (Disks on GNOME and derivatives, or just edit fstab yourself)
You can just mount it in a folder in your home directory. This is not a weird thing to do.
I too had an NTFS partition at first. Definitely not great, since it trashes your file permissions. I was glad to be rid of it when I binned the other OS.
Arch + Cinnamon is neato!
I use Arch, and I have an OpenSUSE wallpaper.
Before this, I used Mint and had an Arch wallpaper…
I live to offend.