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linux

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Presi300 , in One single partition for Linux versus using a partition table?
@Presi300@lemmy.world avatar

I’d use sister partitions for everything but swap, just use zram for swap, it’s faster and doesn’t need it’s own separate partition

mambabasa OP ,
@mambabasa@slrpnk.net avatar

How do I set that up?

elscallr ,
@elscallr@lemmy.world avatar

Boot from a live distro so you can modify your boot disk. Use the disk utility to create partitions. Copy the data to the relevant partitions ensuring to maintain file ownership and permissions. Modify /etc/fstab to mount the partitions at the designated locations in the filesystem.

I don’t bother putting anything but /home on its own dedicated partition, but if you ask 10 people this question you’ll get 12 opinions, so just do what feels right.

mambabasa OP ,
@mambabasa@slrpnk.net avatar

Thanks

elscallr ,
@elscallr@lemmy.world avatar

Note: Create your partitions from your empty space. You may need to resize your existing partition to do this. But don’t practice on your main drive.

This is a simple job, in that the steps are few, but it’s something that causes catastrophic data loss if you get it wrong.

I’d recommend buying a cheap second drive, doesn’t have to be big or even good. Partition it, mount it, make sure you can make the partitions automatically mount, teach yourself to copy data around, umount it and remount, make sure you got it right.

Just… these are all very simple things. I wouldn’t hesitate to repartition my own drives. But if you fuck it up you fuck it up good. Make sure you know the operations you’re taking first. Measure twice, cut once, all that jazz.

mintycactus , in Overheating laptop, should I try a lighweight distro - which one?
@mintycactus@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • dabaldeagul ,
    @dabaldeagul@feddit.nl avatar

    What?

    LunchEnjoyer OP ,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    Uh thanks?

    Kushia , in Customising keyboard layouts Fedora KDE Wayland
    @Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar
    xohshoo , in Is there an easy way to set up an email client so you get system notifications in GNOME once you receive an e-mail?
    shiveyarbles , in Help. Various games stopped working and i have no idea how to diagnose the issues

    You should upgrade to Windows

    dynamo OP ,

    *downgrade

    kariboka ,

    Beehaw of course

    jake_jake_jake_ , in Linux support for wifi in LiveUSB trials with onboard wifi chip and/or additional USB wifi dongle

    hardwire for testing? then when settled do the full install. maybe use a different laptop.

    lemmyvore , in Is there an easy way to set up an email client so you get system notifications in GNOME once you receive an e-mail?

    I’m using Claws Mail. It has a plugin that can do notifications in many ways, including a tray icon. You can configure it to start hidden in the tray, configure how often it checks email and on which accounts, to which folders the notification should react etc.

    SkySyrup , in Is there an easy way to set up an email client so you get system notifications in GNOME once you receive an e-mail?

    I ran into this issue and I chose to fix it in the possibly dumbest way - I just Auto-Open on login, minimize and it just sits there.

    Please only do this if you have major issues managing priorities (gotta get that color matched someday!! aka now)

    palordrolap , in Is there an easy way to set up an email client so you get system notifications in GNOME once you receive an e-mail?

    A dumb idea that probably doesn't have an implementation: Set Thunderbird to play a sound on mail arrival, but have the sound file actually be a pipe that when read from also pushes a system notification. This is kind of like how randomised .signature files were often set up in the old days.

    Other alternatives: 1: There might be a purely mail checker out there that can log into mail servers to see if there's new mail there but not be able to read or download it.

    2: Run your own mail server that pulls mail from other servers. Then it's "merely" a matter of checking for file update times on your own machine. Ancient tools like xbiff were designed for this.

    Crozekiel , in Overheating laptop, should I try a lighweight distro - which one?

    In my experience with them, MSI laptops tend to run quite hot in general, your OS probably isn't going to fix it. You can try one of those laptop cooling plates, basically a mesh platform with fans, ensuring cool air is always available to the laptop intakes, but it isn't exactly a perfect solution.

    Really it just needs more cooling capacity - they seem to cut razor close to the amount needed in their designs so when eventually cooling becomes less efficient either through fans getting tired/clogged or thermal paste/pads breaking down, it will not keep up.

    LunchEnjoyer OP ,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    Yeah it’s a rather thin laptop, but I will open it up and get some cooling paste on it 👍

    daredevil , in Is there an easy way to set up an email client so you get system notifications in GNOME once you receive an e-mail?
    @daredevil@kbin.social avatar

    If you receive these notifications on mobile, you can use kdeconnect (gsconnect on GNOME) which sends pop up notifications on your desktop from your phone, as a workaround.

    shapis OP ,
    @shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

    I love the idea of kdeconnect but it wreaks havoc on my battery, on both phone and laptop.

    Pantherina , in Overheating laptop, should I try a lighweight distro - which one?

    Cant you cramp up the fancourve? Best is in the BIOS as it mostly works best. Also have a look at using liquid metal for cooling, costs nearly nothing. Or simply new good heatpaste, costs like 8€

    the16bitgamer , in Overheating laptop, should I try a lighweight distro - which one?
    @the16bitgamer@lemmy.world avatar

    I have a Gigabyte Clevo thingy, so take what I say with a grain of salt. My laptop has a i5 11 gen intel cup, and it doesn’t have the cooling for my cpu. I don’t know if this is a bug in Linux, or a fault in the pc (probably both). So when I play games it spikes to 80-90C then throttles.

    So what I did was look into software that lets me control the CPU frequency, which led me to Slimbook Battery. This software is amazing and lets me tune the power usage of my cpu to manage the thermals.

    I believe Open Build has a package of Slimbook Battery for Opensuse Tumbleweed, but I’ve had no luck running it. On my Manjaro install it works excellently.

    Anonymouse , in An Untold History of Thunderbird

    It references a sort of partnership with K9 Mail on android, but later says they’re looking to expand Thunderbird into the iOS & Android space. Either they’ll be direct competitors of each other or they’ll start to blend into each other. I’m wondering which.

    americanwaste ,

    Previous blogs have mentioned K-9 is just being rebranded as Thunderbird for Android once the Android app is closer in features to the desktop release. The iOS release will be new entirely as I don’t know of an existing iOS email app they can rebrand.

    hellvolution , in How is your experience with Fedora as a server?
    @hellvolution@lemmygrad.ml avatar

    Just… DON’T!!!

    idiocy OP ,

    But why?

    hellvolution ,
    @hellvolution@lemmygrad.ml avatar

    Because Fedora is a distro for multimedia desktops (being nice to Fedora); not for a server…

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