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kbin.life

zxqwas , to linuxmemes in type the distro you use and is and let your keyboard finish it

Manjaro at the same time as the one that symbolizes emotional immaturity the same time as the one that symbolizes emotional immaturity the same time…

ClassifiedPancake , to asklemmy in What is an achievement in life that you're proud of?

Many things. Stopped smoking, started eating healthier, cooking, doing sports, going to therapy, stopped hating myself, learning to handle my income appropriately so I don’t live credit to credit anymore, getting a dog (now my second) be nice to people and get nice back. All spread out over the last ten years since I had a breakdown when I turned 30.

FuckyWucky , to linux in Can someone explain this command for me?

I hate ycombinator but here:

news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36873927

Strit ,
@Strit@lemmy.linuxuserspace.show avatar

Instead of just linking to the information, which may be removed in the future, you could have also pasted a snippet of a relevant section. Like:

If --force is specified twice, the operation is immediately executed without terminating any processes or unmounting any file systems. This may result in data loss. Note that when --force is specified twice the halt operation is executed by systemctl itself, and the system manager is not contacted. This means the command should succeed even when the system manager has crashed.

lorentz , to selfhosted in community hosted backups

A lot of technical aspects here, but IMHO the biggest drawback is liability. Do you offer free storage connected to internet to a group of “random tech nerds”. Do you trust all of them to use it properly? Are you really sure that none of them will store and distribute illegal stuff with it? Do you know them in person so you can forward the police to them in case they came knocking at your door?

Anonymouse OP ,

Perhaps I’ve been naieve.

hitwright , to linux in Can someone explain this command for me?

As per systemctl(1) manual:

If --force is specified twice, the operation is immediately executed without terminating any processes or unmounting any file systems. This may result in data loss. Note that when --force is specified twice the halt operation is executed by systemctl itself, and the system manager is not contacted. This means the command should succeed even when the system manager has crashed.

nerdovic ,

Ah, the --no-preserve-root flag equivalent for a reboot 😄

dan ,
@dan@upvote.au avatar

Sounds like the equivalent of Alt+SysRq+B.

t0m5k1 , to linux in Can someone explain this command for me?
@t0m5k1@lemmy.world avatar

I’d never use it on a production server due to the implications of data loss associated with such a command.

You could say this is the same as sysreq trigger b where everything is ignored and just reboot with ignorance.

possiblylinux127 ,

You can force the kernel to terminate all processes and amount all filesystems

maniacalmanicmania , to asklemmy in Is federation that good?
@maniacalmanicmania@aussie.zone avatar

I can block instances on Voyager. I assume that only blocks them when I’m browsing on Voyager though and I have no idea how it handles votes/posts/comments for any blocked instance.

Best of luck with your endeavours to find a place you want to hang out in.

viking ,
@viking@infosec.pub avatar

Blocking instances works with the OG Lemmy, but they didn’t build the function into the app, you’d have to go through the website (that one time only).

Or can you block all users of a specific instance with Voyager?

maniacalmanicmania ,
@maniacalmanicmania@aussie.zone avatar

In Voyager there is a setting to add instances you want to block.

Kajika OP ,

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/b1d67f68-ccd6-4c06-a6ba-07209f5e7aaa.png

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/f5b46f34-02ff-494b-ae96-b3b4ea0c7509.png

I must be missing something (I can see the community is not from lemmy.world but the guy is)

Bitrot ,
@Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

It only blocks communities from that instance.

Ferris , to nostupidquestions in When I bite my nails while wearing sound cancelling earbuds, I can hear a moment of static as my skull absorbs the sound or whatever. What's going on here?

noise cancellation should be better at adjusting for sounds which occur for longer periods of time. it takes time to calculate the inversion, the amplitude, the frequency, the emission and line them up.

What does popcorn sound like?

AmidFuror ,

It goes "pop, pop, pop," then "crunch, crunch, crunch."

asciimage , to linuxmemes in type the distro you use and is and let your keyboard finish it

NixOS is a good thing to be done by you sir and all the best for the new year to all of you and your family members

propter_hog , to linux in Can someone explain this command for me?
@propter_hog@hexbear.net avatar

Obligatory “systemd was a mistake, they played us for absolute fools, yadda yadda yadda”

possiblylinux127 ,

So hexbear now hates systemd. Good to know

AlternatePersonMan , to linux in Noob Question Thread: Ask Any Questions About Linux!

With the recent Microsoft garbage, I’m giving Linux another try. I’ve been running a laptop for a while, no issues. My main rig, however can’t read all of my um…?hard drives

A live USB of Mint 21 reads 2 of 5 drives fine. The rest are recognized from GParted, but can’t access them. It looks like NTFS-3G is installed.

I’ve duck duck go’d (which apparently is just Bing) for a solution, but haven’t succeeded. Long term, I can probably pick up another drive, copy, and reformat everything to something Linux friendly. For now, I just want access.

I’m lazy and burned out. I don’t want to use the terminal- which I did try. I just want to make a few clicks and have access to all of my files.

If it matters, the drives (roughly) show up as: 500 gb, 4 TB NTFS (readable) 3, 12, 16 TB unknown (not readable)

Windows says they’re all NTFS.

Is there an easy way to easily mount my drives?

freeman ,

I think the disks could be Dynamic Disks on which it would not be a good idea to install a linux distro.

Unfortunately Microsoft’s own advice to change it to a basic disk (since it considers dynamic deprecated) WILL RESULT IN DATA LOSS.

Since you only want to access them it seem to be possible with ldmtool. While it is a cli tool there is a corresponding service that at least according to some askubuntu posts and arcwiki should make them behave like normal filesystems.

bloodfart ,

If you can boot back into windows, turn off quick startup/shutdown, run chkdsk or whatever on the drives, reboot back into windows then boot back into Linux and you’ll be okay.

Quick startup is a kind of weird sleep/hibernate mutant that leaves drives in an unclean state when it turns off, so the Linux drivers for ntfs say “I’m not gonna touch that possibly damaged drive”.

daniskarma , to fediverse in What made everyone move to Bluesky or Threads instead of Mastodon?

Instance picking can be overwhelming. Making people just not even try it.

I do think a big challenge for the fediverse is how to ease that. And make it like e-mail where @whocares is not that important and it’s easy to actually have a custom domain/instance.

And, of course, to achieve this instance admins should be really be responsible with defederations and bans. And only use it as last resort, probably only because of legal reasons. Not because “I don’t like that instance admins main political thesis”. Probably that kind of blocks are better to be left to the user.

Jezebelley ,

Instance picking is easy. I was “oh cool George Takei is on Universeodon. I’ll go there.”

MacroCyclo , to showerthoughts in If you're sweating in a hot shower, you can't tell

I met a researcher that was measuring swimmer sweat. To do it he had to patch part of their body with a waterproof detector. Spoiler alert, they do!

XeroxCool OP ,

This is the science I live for.

lowleveldata , to games in What's your favorite controller?

Switch pro controller previously and Xbox controller lately. I especially like the detachable AA batteries of the Xbox controller as I can charge extra batteries separately.

fortified_banana , to linux in Can someone explain this command for me?

I always try to consult the man pages for these kind of questions (you can search by typing ‘/’ in the man page). Here’s what the systemctl manual has to say in the specifications for the –force option:

Note that when --force is specified twice the selected operation is executed by systemctl itself, and the system manager is not contacted. This means the command should succeed even when the system manager has crashed.

bionicjoey ,

In other words, RTFM

GolfNovemberUniform ,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

Weird choice tbh. I’d make --force --force a separate option if possible.

Dirk ,
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

You just really force it.

It’s like with -v in various applications. -v means “verbose”, and -vv means “really verbose”, and -vvv means “an ungodly amount of data printed to the terminal, so much that it might crash”.

kungen ,

But that’s all part of the same argument. If it was -f or -ff that’d make sense. Duplicate parameters are usually ignored in like all other programs I can think of.

Dirk ,
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

The -vvv I know is the same as -v -v -v. Can’t check right now, but is the short parameter -f? So maybe give -ff a try …

huginn ,

It’s a dangerous command - I’d rather not run it by accidentally hitting the f key a second time.

narc0tic_bird ,

Yeah, duplicate flags should just be ignored.

Epzillon OP ,

I would use the man pages but my working laptop uses Windows and since the system died i dont have any way to check them until I get home.

Thank you a lot for the answer though, that does explain a lot!

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