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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)Q
Posts
2
Comments
71
Joined
7 mo. ago

  • Yeah, force-closing it didn't help at all. Other people in the thread are saying it's a known issue.

    Then again, I'm not sure why I prefer it over at IronFox. I forget what the real differences were when I last looked at them. IronFox is offered in the FFUpdater app, but not from F-droid, and Fennec is the opposite.

  • He's a people person, damnit!

  • I'm pretty sure that dog is laying down.

  • The kiosks don't even let you put onions on a McChicken.

  • nofail mount option

    Good to know. Thanks!

  • Thanks! Using -e jumped right to the problem:

    Something—I don't know what—added a removable drive to fstab, and the error was that drive couldn't be mounted at boot.

    I have two guesses:

    1. I formatted a microSD card using YaST Paritioner sometime before doing the distro upgrade.
    2. The drive might have been attached during the distro upgrade, though I don't think it was.

    At any rate, I commented out that line in fstab and it booted right up. Now I just have to fix snapper.

    EDIT: Why is my -e red?
    Testing
    -f
    -aBx

    Weird. What I see when viewing mycomment on thelemmy.club:

  • No, I don't think so. Turns out, I don't need the rollback, so now I just need to fix snapper. (I updated my post)

  • Yes, of course. And they they replied to acknowledge they were being reductive, and then explained their exasperation at the original comment (which was not from you). I don't see anything particularly wrong with that, and then you made a pretty condescending reply. That's OK. You don't always need to be polite. Lord knows I'm not. But it was coincidentally kinda funny! I laughed at it, myself. You literally said, "would you like me to explain it like I'm five", which is just so silly! I wish you could see the humor in it.

    So I think their deadpan reply of "No, an explanation like you were five wouldn’t improve upon OP." is an excellent and appropriately snarky reply that points out the silliness of what you said while also returning your snark back to you.

    Have a most excellent day!

  • "I'm sorry you weren't able to understand it...", sounds snarky as hell. That's victim blaming. The original comment they replied to was indeed a bunch of mumbo jumbo.

  • Your comment just now is entirely true, but you completely missed the point.

    The funny part is, you basically offered to talk like a child when explaining.

  • You don't see the humor in you having said, "Do you want me to explain it like I'm five?"

    I thought it was funny. And that's why they replied the way they did. You were also being very snarky. And who wants assistance from someone being snarky?

    This is definitely a both sides are wrong argument. /2¢

  • Just look it up bruh it takes less time than to comment

    Source?

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    My OpenSUSE Tumbleweed install broke and I can't rollback

  • Ah, gotcha.

  • Thanks. I understand better, but I feel like I would just use one of the rear buttons as "disable gyro" if I were to use that kind of setup.

    Your last idea is interesting, but again, there are back buttons for thing like that. Also, how are you even hitting the D-pad when your thumb is on the left stick? I don't see why you would need to change what the D-Pad does based on whether or not your thumb is on the left stick because to hit the D-pad, your thumb is always not on the left stick.

    When I played Horizon Zero Dawn, I had gyro activate on left trigger, like you are saying, and it was very nice. I was so used to playing BotW that I couldn't play any other way.

  • You can disable wake from bluetooth in system settings now

    Good to know!

    The JSAUX one is definitely robust enogh to handle Steam Deck charging. Also, I'm pretty sure it has a chip in it. It was advertised as such when I bought it. That means it probably is compliant.

  • I ended up sticking my windows NVMe in an external enclosure so I can still boot from it, if needed. You just have to change a couple registry keys first, so it loads the USB driver earlier in boot to allow it to boot off of an external drive.

    I can even boot the drive as a VM using QEMU for something quick. You just had to be careful you don't accidentally mount the drive at the same time QEMU is using it.