You’ve had some good advice here already, all I’d add is that you should install the package tldr as it’s a very noob-friendly accessible version of man pages (the manuals which come with every piece of software on Linux).
I’m not happy with RedHat neither. And Fedora 40 considering to add telemetry doesn’t help. I love Fedora tho, but if RHEL keeps heading the way is going I’ll hop to another distro.
Maybe is time to try Arch and embrace the meme (and learn, I’m a lil scared)
It now shows the device but I get an error when launching the app for debug from VS Code.
<pre style="background-color:#ffffff;">
<span style="color:#323232;">Launching lib/main.dart on Chrome in debug mode...
</span><span style="color:#323232;">[CHROME]:/var/lib/flatpak/app/com.brave.Browser/x86_64/stable/55eab7c3b790510e9175f8a064f16c84972163599c064dc833eff81bec751652/export/bin/com.brave.Browser: line 2: /usr/bin/flatpak: No such file or directory
</span><span style="color:#323232;">Failed to launch browser after 3 tries. Command used to launch it: /var/lib/flatpak/exports/bin/com.brave.Browser --user-data-dir=/tmp/flutter_tools.LCRXFZ/flutter_tools_chrome_device.IXGKQA --remote-debugging-port=44639 --disable-background-timer-throttling --disable-extensions --disable-popup-blocking --bwsi --no-first-run --no-default-browser-check --disable-default-apps --disable-translate http://localhost:33631
</span><span style="color:#323232;">Failed to launch browser. Make sure you are using an up-to-date Chrome or Edge. Otherwise, consider using -d web-server instead and filing an issue at https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues.
</span><span style="color:#323232;">Exited
</span>
I’m not sure what I need to modify to make VS Code launch Brave as a device in debug mode.
Ok, just to clarify, my original struggle was to understand what made tmux different from using some terminal app and just split the screen xD
Not every terminal emulator has window splitting capabilities. Some, like Alacritty, specifically expect you to run a program like tmux if you want this functionality. Splitting within tmux also makes it vastly easier to multitask on a remote host via SSH: if you run a remote tmux, every split window is already running on the same remote host, no need to log in again and again.
This is just a matter of personal preference, but I can’t stand libreoffice UI. It has more features but I don’t open office documents much, mostly just some basic spreadsheets, so I can get away with using a document editor with less feature but easier to the eye.
While self-hosting reduces the number of requests to upstream, it does not completely solve the problem (since OP still needs to forward requests to an upstream DNS). Do you have any suggestions for that?
Unbound can be configured to make requests directly to the DNS “root server” . These should not be censored. The guide linked by surfbum explains this accordingly.
I love the branding and general concept of openSUSE, and YAST is amazing, but I absolutely hate the dependency hell they have going on with their “patterns”. Patterns are metapackages, so a pattern basically just refers to other packages and installs a whole bunch of them. It just gets really messy once a pattern may refer to another pattern to make sure that everything it needs is installed. I’m not sure if that still is the case these days, but I found it really confusing and difficult to get the distro install only the stuff I want and need and trim down on anything else. You can already do this in the mighty installer or try it after installation, but both ways, patterns really got in my way. You may see the same pattern be suggested in multiple categories if I remember right, and if you overlook it only once, updates will pull all that stuff again. I would love to use openSUSE, it has a lot going for it, but that package management is a nightmare and one of the worst I have encountered during distro hopping, thanks to those patterns.
probably has to do with windows 11’s unrealistic system requirements, most computers are perfectly fine but aren’t able to update so people switch to linux since buying a new pc is not very affordable especially in the current economy
Technically correct, but the new version is so much better. It leaves the old one in the dust. I wish they’d make an official release for PC, though. I’d like to try it out.
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