I have never had thunderbird crash. Not questioning what you say but perhaps its sonsthing else? Did u try deleting thubderbird data and starting fresh ?
I have never had thunderbird crash. Not questioning what you say but perhaps its sonsthing else? Did u try deleting thubderbird data and starting fresh ?
Ya there is prboom which is installable on Linux. Also dosbox was a thing for playing dos games on Linux
If the tracking software is open source what is stopping employees from changing source code to their advantage ?
It could also be a disk problem. I second the backup suggestion
my laptop does reset it every reboot.
If you are using KDE, you can just use KDE’s battery manager to set it there.
otherwise, your solution is good too.
Some laptops allow for controlling level kf charge. For example I keep my battery at 65% to prolong its life. If its supported, you should be able to set it through /sys/class/power_supply/bat0/charge_level
i dont rember file name and path exactly but shouldnlook like this
Edit: Correct filename is /sys/class/power_supply/BAT0/charge_control_end_threshold
Thank you!
am running Gentoo with systemd. does a bug in syslog affect me?
If you are running apt
then you are running debian or ubuntu which the article clearly states they are vulnerable.
but anyway I was asking how do I figure it out by myself
they didnt explain how the exploit work or howto know if your system is vulnerable
in many cases you could simply move the directory that is taking too much space to different directory then either make softlink or if that didnt work you can use mount --bind
for example if directory /var/cach/mygame is too big, move my game to /mnt/part2/mygames
then either do ln -s /mnt/part2/mygames /var/cach/
or mount --bind /mnt/part2/mygames /var/cach/mygames
the miunt option is not permanent so if it works, u will need to add it to /etc/fstab to make it permenent
nah I need to check my compass every 3 seconds or I go crazy
vnc works on windows on linux
depends on what you mean by “broken”. If broken means has bad sector or other hardware issue, then yes OP should transfer data to healthy partition and work from there. though it certainly won’t hurt if he attempted to recover data from broken partition (worst the HD dies and OP restore the backup on healthy HD) However he said “i broke my partition” which make me think its software issue, not hardware. in which case, would be faster to recover data directly after taking backup
this clones one parition to another which is fine if you have free partition with enough space lying around. My code was for taking compressed backup of the partition to be restored later if needed. Its less convenient but doesnt require as much space nor does it require an entire partition
use dd and save the whole drive to a bigger drive or maybe compress it with gzip while using dd to save it to a slightly smaller one
command would be something like this:
dd if=/dev/…/myparition|gzip status=progress > /mnt/external_hd/mypartition.gzip
I couldnt understand what exactly is KDE gears? If it fixes bugs in KDE, why those bugs are not fixed directly in KDE code?
If they annoubce what is it, attackers could use the bug to exploit systems before people get chance to update.
Though I worry its possible to know what the bug is by reviewing changes in curl source code
For anyone taking this comment seriously like I did, its just a joke. There is no such thing as dorcelessness syndrome .
First mentioned by linus techtip.
i had fun arguing with chatgpt about this