Whoa, surprised this is coming from The Verge. Is it really the year of the Linux desktop now??
Install Guix
Whoa, surprised this is coming from The Verge. Is it really the year of the Linux desktop now??


Ufff. Yeah, I also hit a slop mountain of videos when searching for Seafile comparisons…
i knew what i did and why i did it, two years ago, after which i never had to touch it again until now
Hahaha, true. This is why I try to keep as many notes as possible, leave lots of comments, add READMEs, links, and otherwise document what I did and why.
It’s not perfect, it’s often tedious, and I don’t always do it, but when I come back 2 years later wondering why I set some random option, it’s pretty nice having at least some hint.
you understand it more when you build something by yourself, so it’s easier for you to fix it when it’s broken.
For me, this is a big selling point. Instead of trying to figure out why someone did something or wrestling with their decisions, I know what I did, why I did it, and if necessary, and I can change it.


Every time I hear him speak, I am reminded of just how stupid he is.
I know this is common knowledge on Lemmy, but damn it’s still nice to read. When I talk to folks around town, they all think he’s a genius… it’s really jarring.
Oooooh, ok. TIL.
At least Arch and Debian seem to use top from procps-ng. Good to know.
I missed this part during my first read:
This screen allows you to customise which fields are displayed in the currently selected window. Use cursor keys (or Alt + j and k) to move up and down this list, d to toggle whether a field is displayed and s to choose the field by which the window is sorted.
and when I tried it, it seemed like my commands weren’t doing anything… so in case anyone else finds this helpful…
How to sort columns in top.
topf (not SHIFT+F)s to sort by the column you’ve currently selected
whose current sort field is $COLUMN_NAMEsq to exit the Fields Management screenAt this point, top may not look like it sorted the selected column. It may be helpful to tell top to highlight the currently sorted column. Press x to do this.
Now it should be easier to tell which column was sorted.
Wait… what?
$ top --version
top from procps-ng 4.0.5-dirty
The following utilities are provided by procps:
- free - Report the amounts of free and used memory in the system
- hugetop - Report hugepage usage of processes and the system as a whole
- kill - Send a signal to a process based on PID
- pgrep - List processes based on name or other attributes
- pkill - Send a signal to a process based on name or other attributes
- pmap - Report the memory map of a process
- ps - Report process information including PID and resource usage
- pwdx - Report the current working directory of a process
- skill - Obsolete version of pgrep/pkill
- slabtop - Display kernel slab cache information in real time
- snice - Renice a process
- sysctl - Read or write kernel parameters at run-time
- tload - Graphical representation of system load average
- top - Dynamic real-time view of running processes
- uptime - Display how long the system has been running
- vmstat - Report virtual memory statistics
- w - Report logged in users and what they are doing
- watch - Execute a program periodically, showing output fullscreen
Oh, so these guys manage top and a few other common utilities.
I would often just grab htop because I had no idea how to read the CPU usage out of top.
lol, same! 1t gets me 90% of the functionality I use in htop.
Wow. wat. This is top??

The only reason I use htop is because I never bothered to learn top. I’m totally down to avoid downloading and installing another utility though. The time to learn top is TODAY!


To Home Assistant! The cause of, and solution to, all of life’s problems. 🍻


Ampwall was another Bandcamp alternative I had heard about. Although, Mirlo is federated with ActivityPub?? Nice.
On Guix, I could bisect (like git bisecting) my OS. So usually what would happen is:
guix system switch-generation $n, where n is the last known good stateUnfortunately, my laptop is too new so Guix isn’t fully compatible with all my hardware. (Yes, I was using nonguix)
But that was a pretty neat experience compared to debugging something on Arch.


Yeah! CUPS is great. I just connected my Brother printer to it and everything Just Works.


Aaah, ok. I read the docs at https://librewolf.net/installation/macos/#homebrew but got scared when I saw “flagged as broken”. I’ll give it a shot anyway, thanks!


I never thought to read “floorp” as “floor” + “pee”, but now I can’t unsee that.


Has anyone figured out how to automate updates on macOS (ew I know, but it’s my wife’s computer)?
Ah, nice ok. Your post got me to look at dropbear a little more closely, but since I got a bunch of disks, I think USB unlock makes more sense in my setup. I’m using a keyfile on the USB to unlock a bunch of disks on boot. But if I only had one, then dropbear would be more doable for me.
Neat! Interesting post!
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