No parts manufacturers will do the extra work to make them work for Linux
They just don’t want to. Now they can stop releasing security patches and users would buy new hardware.
No parts manufacturers will do the extra work to make them work for Linux
They just don’t want to. Now they can stop releasing security patches and users would buy new hardware.
I’m running Gnome 46 on i3 3217U with 4GB RAM. Works so smooth, maybe even better than Cinnamon. SSD makes all the difference.
If you have root, you can try acc magisk module. I can set charging treshhold and limit charging current with it.
I can’t live without dash-to-dock extension.
I can find 120 GB used SSD for 5€)
Today it happened for the first time for me. I use arch btw.
Last phosh release was 3 days ago and it should work with any distro on wayland
You need to do something like this (and add LED strip).
What’s wrong with GIMP? I used photoshop before, but GIMP pretty comfortable for me.
I use Alpine with Gnome 45. Works excellent for browsing web.
Tried photopea on my phone. It’s laggy. I use cracked version of “Photo Editor” for making memes.
New versions of Android have made turning off mobile data more inconvenient. Now, you need to tap twice instead of just once in previous versions.
Usually VGA connector has slots for a screwdriver.
I dismantled several cheap inkjet printers for parts. There are countless useful parts inside for my future DIY projects. 24-volt power supplies, several motors, pulleys, belts, hundreds of small bolts.
My cheap AM3 motherboard doesn’t cares about USB short circuts. So it’s HP’s deliberate miscalculation.
I used such a cable from ugreen. This cable lasted 1 month, while standard cables from this company lasted for years.
My RPi4 refused to start with a 2x2.5" hard drive, so I did some workarounds. I connected the USB 3.0 +5V pin to the GPIO and powered the RPi using a PD trigger with MINI 560 (5A DC-DC converter). In my case, a random 18W QC brick was enough.