

I’ve seen landlords put these things on doors, too, and use them to allow entrance to anyone they think has a reason to be inside, whether the resident knows and consents or not.
I’ve seen landlords put these things on doors, too, and use them to allow entrance to anyone they think has a reason to be inside, whether the resident knows and consents or not.
I was watching a friend’s dogs while she was on vacation when the batteries in her door lock died. I had to climb in a back window to get inside and feed them. Luckily, there was a back door with a dumb lock, but I had to get inside first and borrow her keys for that to help.
With Ollama, all you have do is copy an extra folder of ROCm files. Not hard at all.
With an AMD RX 6800 + 32gb DDR4, I can run up to a 34b model at an acceptable speed.
W2k was the best.
Yeah, I really liked LXDE.
Yep. I’ve had no problems with x11. It’s always been super stable.
TBH, I’ve always wanted to do this.
I use XFCE, but I like Cinnamon too. I use Nemo and Xed instead of Thunar and…whatever.
At some point, probably after Fedora stops supporting x11, openSUSE plans to follow suit, and it will no longer be available in the repos. There’s no firm date for when this will occur, though. I read about it on the official forum.
I use XFCE. If their Wayland support isn’t ready when openSUSE Tumbleweed eliminates support for x11, I’m not sure what I’ll go to.
Good to know, even though I’m not a Gnome user. I wonder if it will work with torsocks.
All pollinators are good pollinators.
It seems like most people these days have lights mounted on their house that shine all night long, or turn on automatically every time something moves outside. My boyfriend thinks those are a good idea, but so far I’ve managed to talk him out of it.
It’s difficult to find a pesticide, even one intended for casual gardeners, that doesn’t advertise that it kills hundreds of different types of insects.
That’s amazing.
This is very insightful.
I use LACT. It’s very easy to use and works well.
Ohh, now I get it.
I think that’s been the law everywhere I’ve lived, too, but not always followed…