As someone who occasionally dabbles in music production on Linux, I love that Pipewire lets me run JACK and Pulseaudio apps side-by-side without having to jump through hoops.
As someone who occasionally dabbles in music production on Linux, I love that Pipewire lets me run JACK and Pulseaudio apps side-by-side without having to jump through hoops.
On my distro (debian) I can use systemctl --user restart pipewire.service
.
This website explains the process: https://git-send-email.io/
You could try the solution suggested in this reddit thread, and use systemctl
to start and stop wireguard instead of wg-quick
.
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For me, Crunchbang was a great introduction to the possibilities of customizing your Linux experience. No giant, monolithic desktop environment, just a handful of programs that you could (and were encouraged to) tweak or replace to your heart’s content.
I still run a Crunchbang-inspired setup on my vanilla Debian install—openbox, tint2, conky, nitrogen, gmrun, Win+Letter hotkeys for frequently-used apps, etc. While I’ve outgrown the need for a preconfigured distro myself, I’m glad to see these projects still providing an on-ramp for users looking to dip their toes into the deeper end of the Linux pool.
The first step after you untar is always “open the README and look for build instructions.”
In “set” mode, the game doesn’t ask you if you want to switch every time an opposing trainer sends out a new pokemon.
Personally my only gripe with systemd is that the systemctl and journalctl commands are cryptic and unintuitive. Every time I have to use one (which thankfully isn’t often), I have to spend 5 minutes reading man pages to remind myself whether -u is “user” or “unit”, what the difference is between a “unit” and a “service”, etc.
I imagine this is what non-developers feel like when they’re forced to use git—having a whole pile of unfamiliar vocabulary and syntax thrown in your face when you’re just trying to do one simple thing.
Same thing happened to me. Borked my Windows install and didn’t have a recovery disc, so I just wiped the whole thing and went Linux-only. Never looked back since. :)
Sometimes, all you need is a little push to get you out of your comfort zone.
There’s also vidir from moreutils, which lets you bulk-rename files in your $EDITOR of choice.
If you’re using a shell script to install software, you’ve already failed.
Better alternatives include
Alt+Backspace works in bash too, and should work in any other command-line program that reads input using readline.
Naturally they only get to charge for already-sold copies if you accept the new terms that include the charges. As for how it’s legal to include those charges in the new terms to begin with, I guess you’d have to ask a contract lawyer. Presumably Unity’s own lawyers are convinced they can get away with it, or they wouldn’t have done it.
Unity licenses are sold as a subscription. When the subscription runs out, you either have to renew it and accept the new terms, or lose the license and stop distributing your game.
This technique is called Huffman coding, and it’s used in a number of compression algorithms.
If you actually read the post, you’ll see that there’s no “business risk”—the entire audiobook is already recorded. He’s just using Kickstarter as a platform to sell pre-orders.
By paying for Bing to be the default search engine of Firefox.
You’re thinking of Mtgox, a Magic card trading website that reinvented itself as a Bitcoin exchange—and then disappeared with its users’ money.