

I usually make ~/Packages for various binary packages that I can’t add as repos for whatever reason. And ~/Packages/src for stuff I compile myself.
And ~/Games for games.


I usually make ~/Packages for various binary packages that I can’t add as repos for whatever reason. And ~/Packages/src for stuff I compile myself.
And ~/Games for games.


I just call it ~/Porn.


None of these things need GPS to function. Even planes. A compass, a map and a clock go a long way.
The script would place its own version of sudo in your $PATH and wait for you to enter the password. Then it has it and can do what it likes with the information.
Then it’d just tell you “wrong password” and forward you to the real sudo so that you can keep on working like nothing happened.
Edit: Or even better, pass your own commands to take over the whole system to the real sudo.


Yeah, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed automatically creates a new snapshot before and after installing or removing any packages. It’s great. I currently have some weird dbus bug. With the snapshots I can easily go back and forth to analyse it.


If the Frame is as open as the Deck it will be the perfect device for VR devs to play around with and make awesome stuff with. i think one of the things holding back VR was that almost every headset was super locked down.
If the Quests had been more open we’d have had much more experimental games. Maybe the Metaverse would actually be a thing. But Meta prefers to keep everything under their control not realising that this hampers development and adoption.


Yeah, but I don’t think KDE has VR capabilities. So it’ll be interesting to see how that’ll work. They mentioned the ability of opening desktop applications in VR. So I think you’ll be able to position those in space.


At the moment it isn’t even that. It’s more the concept of an inventory of the landscape of a plan.


They should happen in that order, and ideally copyright would only be awarded to individuals (or perhaps specifically named lists of individuals, with some reasonable cap), not corporations.
That’s actually the law in Germany. Here it’s not called copyright but originator’s right. The big caveat being that things you create while under contract are licensed to companies. But the originator’s rights can not be transferred or erased.
Of course international contracts severely muddy the waters here.
I use dropbear in initramfs on my Debian server. Works great.
At home I have a cheap networked KVM because I also sometimes have hardware problems preventing a boot. Works really well. Cost 100 € and uses open source software. It’s called GL.iNet KVM.


The Signal lead has been vocally against doing a fully fledged version for Linux for a while now. He really likes his closed ecosystems. “for security”
Desktop Linux is soooo insecure because users can access their own data.


OpenSUSE is big on the security and usability front. None of the services you install activate by themselves. Firewall active by default. The first user doesn’t get access to every group under the sun after installation.
And everything can be controlled through GUI tools. But it doesn’t throw a fit when you’ve done something yourself through the CLI.


Opposing
Does it shutdown if you wait ten minutes? Maybe it’s a stuck process. After a timeout (don’t know what the default is) it should be killed.


nvidia-driver-G06-kmp-meta should be the package to install. It should pull in the gl and video packages.


First you should see if the nvidia module is loaded
lsmod | grep nvidia
If not, try to load it.
sudo modprobe nvidia
If it’s still not loaded after that check dmesg for errors.
I think they dropped support for 10xx era cards with 580. Maybe that’s it.


FWIW Germany is already opposing it. I’m pleasantly surprised.


my Plasma Bigscreen Linux TV Box
Nice! What distro are you on? Or did you compile it yourself?
“The rats playing Doom have become too good at slaying. We can’t let them escape.”
“They escaped.”