Yeah, I really wish people would be a little more tactful when they go on performative tirades like this. It's giving "old man yells at cloud" energy. Ridiculous behaviour when you think about it. People can block clouds, yelling is worse than useless.
yardy_sardley
To be totally fair, nostr's whole thing is that users can delete all of their federated data if they want to, so it makes sense if they are upset about having their data copied to a place they can't control.
Not sure how realistic that is with the data being publicly accessible via the web, but I wouldn't be surprised if the they have some kind of license that gives the dmca request the ability to hold a nonzero amount of water. Then again, I wouldn't be suprised if completely fails, either.
My brain accepted this new piece of information and immediately tried to recalibrate my sense of wellbeing based on how much time I spend playing cozy games.
So there was a bizarre moment where I felt positively dandy.
Did anyone else get a mental health buff just from reading this headline?
The more it hurts the more it shows you really care, right?
It definitely could be a hardware failure, but if the system still boots fine, it's probably not that. Based on the symptoms, I think you might have clobbered your PATH variable. This can happen when you do something like PATH=/new/path/
because the variable gets overwritten. You have to remember to preserve the existing value with PATH=$PATH:/new/path/
. Don't worry, this is reversible.
The best thing to do would be to fix or temporarily remove the commands you used to set PATH in whatever profile or .rc file it's in. You can run whatever text editor you have installed by specifying the path to the executable. I don't know exactly where vim is on Fedora, but it's probably something similar to /sbin/vim
or /usr/bin/vim
. Keep trying locations until you find the right one. Then log out and back in and it should be fixed.
You might also be able to login as root and use the shell normally to fix the problem, depending on which file contains the faulty command. Hopefully this helps.
Did you only try F2? It's possible the graphical session is on tty2 - see if ctl+alt+F1/ 3 does anything
Not just mp3, all lossy audio formats use psychoacoustic analysis. That's how they figure out which data to throw out.
Not sure if sarcasm or actual disinformation. You're not supposed to trust the aur, that's kinda the whole point of it. The build scripts are transparent enough to allow users to manage their own risk, and at no point does building a package require root access.
Probably have a few cards running the displays and the rest of them mining some sphere-themed memecoin
Linus himself uses a macbook, I'm sure the mainline kernel has decent support for somewhat recent hardware