I can’t vouch for it as a music player, but it’s what I use for videos when I can’t get on a bigger screen. It’s nothing like the desktop app, so you might want to give it a try.
I can’t vouch for it as a music player, but it’s what I use for videos when I can’t get on a bigger screen. It’s nothing like the desktop app, so you might want to give it a try.
Have you checked these all on winehq? It would be nice for them to be reported with logs if they haven’t already.
Garmin Express for example is on there with some discussion here: https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=version&iId=40213
It might not help in the short term, but even just having logs for more broken programs could be useful for the wine project.
I love that you have a very specific and arguably moral crime in mind, and it inspired this post.
Did you grep that log file for ‘amdgpu’?
I wonder if the error is related to this: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/229108
I’m still using x11 on my system. Maybe try that and see if it works?
No, I haven’t seen anything like that. That’s odd.
I’ve had those errors on my system for years. I never thought that they were NixOS specific. I just assumed something to do with a buggy firmware:
Enabled 4 GPEs in block 00 to 1F
ACPI Error: Aborting method \_SB.PCI0.GPP2.PTXH.RHUB.POT3._PLD due to previous error (AE_AML_UNINITIALIZED_ELEMENT) (20240322/psparse-529)
[x~20]
ACPI: PCI Root Bridge [PCI0] (domain 0000 [bus 00-ff])
I don’t notice any ill-effects from them, so it may be a red herring. I have a:
$ < /sys/devices/virtual/dmi/id/board_name
ROG STRIX B450-F GAMING
with a 5900X.
I don’t usually see as many prints as you have there, but it’s quite a few, and the number seems to vary (grow?) over time. I keep meaning to investigate it, but haven’t got around to it.
I think you should keep looking in your logs for other problems. If you can share the full log I’d be happy to take a look.
I’m not afraid of scissors, but I’m very afraid of my victorinox knife.
Why would there be one answer to this? I’d probably use all the available levels depending on the situation, in the same way I’d use --word-diff
or -b
in git
when I need help understanding a complex change.
The original error actually makes it sound like there’s a partition on hda that’s bigger than hda itself.
It probably becomes CPU limited with those other compression algorithms.
You could use something like atop
to find the bottleneck.
Have you checked all the ethernet links are actually connected at 1G and not 100M?
We want to negotiate, but you must allow us to eat all the chips.
There are so many levels of fuckery in the American system. It goes all the way up to just asking the supreme court (who you appointed) to please let you win.
I’ve been using orgzly for years and this is the first I’ve heard of revived. Looks promising.
Of course not, but you have to either trust your users to some extent or give them a system that’s locked down to the point of hindering them.
What is ‘unallowed software’? A shell script the user wrote? Something they downloaded and compiled?
Limiting that seems fundamentally at odds with FOSS.
If you stop shipping autotools generated artefacts in your tarballs, things will be a lot simpler.
Weirdly enough the malicious code does look eerily similar to the benign code, because both are unnecessarily obfuscated.
This is not a human written or readable file you’re talking about. It’s a generated script.
As the other user suggested, you probably just need to mount the root subvolume somewhere and run it on that.
Try using btdu
. I’m not sure how it works with compression, but it at least understands snapshots, as long as they are named in a sane way.
I’d just count calories and reduce the amount per day until you’re losing weight.
The time of day you eat things shouldn’t really matter. This will also teach you really quickly how to feel full on minimal calories. For me I just try to eat something like raw carrots when I want a snack.