Fair enough. I was speaking towards the perspective of op. We were encouraged, not required, so there were definitely some folks who would do that.
Other accounts:
Fair enough. I was speaking towards the perspective of op. We were encouraged, not required, so there were definitely some folks who would do that.
That sounds like poor IT policies to me. In previous office jobs I’ve had, our computers were configured with our working hours and we wouldn’t shut them down at the end of the day, so that any updates could happen off the clock and minimize that sort of disruption.
You should forget anything you’ve read in this thread and play Outer Wilds ASAP. And you should go into it as blind as possible. Trust me; you only get to experience it for the first time once.
A new planet in a distant orbit, you say?
In before the signal is older than the universe itself.
There’s also WSL though your mileage may vary.
Well that’s an unorthodox way to sanitize your phone.
I hardly dream so I guess I would say “it’s a dream when I wake up afterwards”
What a detailed post, that was a fun read. You clearly live a much more interesting life than some of us
For accuracy, it should be updated to read “Snitches will need stitches.”
… :(
I got this super cheap camera off Amazon a while ago, it doesn’t have software or any special drivers. You just plug it in and Windows sees it as a generic video device.
I would ask whether you realize you’re on a linux community, but you referred to a man
page as a wiki article so you are clearly lost.
The first paragraph past the link is a summary of the function of the program.
fstrim is used on a mounted filesystem to discard (or “trim”) blocks which are not in use by the filesystem. This is useful for solid-state drives (SSDs) and thinly-provisioned storage.
To add to this, a new type of brain cell was discovered just last year. (I would have linked directly to the study but there was a server error when I followed the cite.)