Disconnect from the VPN.
try running: ping 8.8.8.8
If it responds your net is good.
try running: ping google.com
If it responds your dns is good.
Disconnect from the VPN.
try running: ping 8.8.8.8
If it responds your net is good.
try running: ping google.com
If it responds your dns is good.
you can remap keys with any keyboards
I use Ctrl, Alt for applications, Super for the os/windowing. I hated MacOS which mixed these things. Luckily X.org let’s you do whatever you like, sometimes it’s just harder to configure. But I like it as it is.
urxvt, bspwm, sxhkd, and many small utilities that I built my desktop with. It’s hard to reproduce the same setup.
You listed malwares. Nvidia works tho.
AOSP is a huge set of unknown. Despite it’s Linux, it’s not like my Arch where I can contribute to the OS. There are arbitrary security measures against the user protecting the device maker, not the user. Where’s my sudo command, where’s my terminal?
We also had a hard time finding the route. There are narrow paths not shown in the map.
I agree that flatpak is not there yet. The API is limited, and it is also hard to package an app. But I really want to see it succeed
I don’t use any of these, but I’m curious. Could you please write some examples?
I’ve never understood putting arbitrary limits on a company laptop. I had always been seeking for ways to hijack them. Once I ended up using a VM, without limit…
do they interfere?
Read thoroughly. Can’t agree more.
you can turn off notifications from starred projects
I’m not against it, but another factor that we should check in a terminal emulator (as a tool where you run everything from) is the system requirements.
I’m using urxvt and that’s so easy on the system, it starts instantly. I can open multiple instances without worrying about the system resources.
I believe it uses X.org’s text rendering. X.org uses OpenGL under the hood. It’s not CPU rendered.
Alacrity felt bulkier when I tried. I will try this too though.
From the list, openscad requires the least tutorial. Solvespace is really easy also, but you need to watch some exciting modelling videos before you get the idea around it. Blender is hard.
OpenScad also gives you a different modelling experience that lets you write reusable models, e.g. if you are a carpenter, 90% of your modelling is sizing and positioning fiberboards to shape a box. You can “automate” such tasks, easily. I wrote a script for myself that does that, and I’m now super fast at modelling furnitures. After some modelling you will be also capable of making such lib. (As a developer, I might be biased)
If you are interested in this library: https://github.com/fxdave/woodworkers-lib
Try solvespace or openscad or blender depending on your use-case.
afaik, fedora is the testing distro for RHEL. I also felt this way, when a new gnome version released much earlier than for Arch and it had an obvious bug that could be catched with little testing.
And many issues I found in Fedora’s bug tracker was auto closed by the new release. Which is quite frequent. Reviewing the bugs is not that frequent.
Buy good hardware next time