But it does rebuild all the libraries every time does it not?
But it does rebuild all the libraries every time does it not?
Lol rust winamp clone let’s gooooo
I guess it’s actually pretty dry in there, more like under the table
I thought he was in a hole not a table
Better call my ISP and ask for a reassignment
Uh oh I have that same IP address
Congratulations 🎉 Nice work figuring it out.
Gotta love the idea that when you uninstall a package all the packages that depend on it must be removed for consistency.
Out of curiosity, what were you looking to gain from the pipewire upgrade?
And now we have free threads so I can’t say at least you don’t have normal concurrency problems 🤣
I enjoy red hat’s paid support articles that end by saying this is untested and may not work but it was added to the knowledge base 10 years ago
Don’t worry Java is alive and well on Android… For now 😹
We can already run arm seamlessly on x86 Linux, why not use Qemu-user + binfmt misc the other way around? I guess FEX must be much faster. Im also not super keen to run binaries that can’t be recompiled anyway so probably not the target audience.
Take that Java, everything is a portable binary now.
Hmmm I do need a reason to learn rust… But a cross platform DAW feels like too big of a project for my level of disorganization 😹
Maybe I should try building ardour for android, it would be way easier to rebuild Ardour’s UI for mobile.
ddrescue is probably your best bet
dd is the simplest: dd if=/path/to/disk/device of=/path/to/backup/file but it may fail with a broken device. ddrescue is similar but handles io errors appropriately and can retry bad reads.
That one DAW for electronic music… The logo had a hexagon or something… Caustic maybe?
ChromeOS does this well because it’s android, a walled garden that users aren’t allowed to break. You can buy it at Walmart, and it works well.
Other big “consumer” distro projects (Debian, Ubuntu, fedora, rhel, etc) are similar, especially if you’re installing stable releases on hardware that is supported.
The question for me is what do users want their OS to do? My guess is internet, office, print, scan, photos, games, updates, and get out of the way. Almost all big distros will give you that experience already, as long as you don’t expect to play Windows games or pick a specialized gaming distro.
Users who want to step outside using supported repos are back to googling for a solution when things are broken, and should see themselves as part of the tech-savvy group that need to fend for themselves.
Gotta go count my files again… oh yeah it’s PROJE~14.BAS
Idk why I feel compelled to add this info, but / doesn’t have to be local as long as the necessary kernel modules for mounting it are available in the initrd or built into the kernel.
For me it’s I can make Linux do this when I see another system perform well, in contrast with they took my vertical taskbar in windows 11 and I have to gut the system to get it back
I do have to remind myself that I’m still used to living in a world where Linux enjoyed immunity to most “consumer” malware just because it wasn’t a popular desktop. Ultimately Linux is not more secure than any other system unless someone put in the work to make it that way.
Lol what has more of an attack surface: CUPS or a reactos VM?