Tyoda

joined 6 months ago
[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 11 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Counterpoint: I am too young to understand this technology, it scares me, and I am unwilling to learn.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

I never really figured this game out, and the only thing I really remember is that while playing I was listening to a video about the "trying to trademark reaction youtube" debacle.

Anyway. Bye.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 4 points 1 month ago

I've never installed fedora specifically but...

Anyway I created a free 900GB ext4 partition

It's either ext4 or free, can't be both. Now, if it was ext4, Fedora would for sure detect it as such, so I'm not sure what it is.

I assume you would want to click on sda6 in the installer, then the "-" button to delete whatever is there, and then it would recognize it as available space.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago

Check my other comment. sda6 is there.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago (4 children)

sda6 is the fourth one (after sda3) in the list on the bottom picture. The partitions seem to be physically in that order, but labeled differently, as they were created. You can reorder the labels but it's also fine left alone AFAIK.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 9 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (5 children)

Any self-respecting distro pushed an update to fix this days ago, so just updating (and restarting cups) will do. But if you don't print anyway, you might as well disable it.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 15 points 3 months ago

As long as it's in your list, your client keeps a copy of the torrent file around somewhere.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

In this case definitely the first. Just make a new directory (name doesn't matter: SATA, Files, data...) and use your distro's tool to change the mount point (Disks on GNOME and derivatives, or just edit fstab yourself)

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 3 points 4 months ago (2 children)

You can just mount it in a folder in your home directory. This is not a weird thing to do.

I too had an NTFS partition at first. Definitely not great, since it trashes your file permissions. I was glad to be rid of it when I binned the other OS.

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

Arch + Cinnamon is neato!

[–] Tyoda@lemm.ee 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Yep. Would be pretty bad software otherwise. Best to set it up so it keeps one monthly, one weekly, and 2-3 daily snapshots. Then you don't even need to think about it, and it deletes older ones automatically. You can still do manual snapshots, and it won't delete those.

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