Hell no. Even as someone who avidly uses chatgpt I think this is a massive privacy breach
Hell no. Even as someone who avidly uses chatgpt I think this is a massive privacy breach
Piped is good but I’m finding I’m having to instance hop a lot.
Could updating my bios and all that help with this issue?
I understand now. I now have a pop OS boot entry, and it’s set as first boot priority. However, I’m still having the original issue of windows putting itself first on the boot priority after rebooting from windows.
Edit: after another reboot the pop_os boot entry I just made has vanished
Thanks for explaining, I’m still quite new to Linux in general
I’m a little confused about what I’m meant to be doing in this part
You’ll need to find the partition number and the reference to the disk in /dev for your boot partition /dev/disk/by-partuuid/172a0183-3a89-4b78-b1b3-d016ca6675f7. You can try using ls -l /dev/disk/by-partuuid/172a0183-3a89-4b78-b1b3-d016ca6675f7 to see where it points (i.e. for /dev/sdb2 you would use --disk /dev/sdb --part 2).
I also, get this error “invalid numeric value Y” when trying to manually register systemd-boot
That’s what I’m doing, but it gets changed again every time I boot to windows
Maybe? The first item is mine is the pop os sytemD boot loader though
Here’s a paste bin link to the output of that command: https://pastebin.com/RexZ1DDn
I’m not certain why Windows boot manger has so many entries, I only have one windows install
You explained a lot, thank you. This is my first experience with Linux and its community. It’s very nice how willing everyone is to help explain
Pardon the late reply but what does man do?
And what exactly does that command do?
Im about to take the same plunge into Linux. Any tips for a new comer?
This is a step closer to crossing that line