

There’s also a new activation method in MAS (Microsoft Activation Scripts) that enables the commercial ESU with 3 more years of updates. The regular consumer ESU just gets you 1 more year of security updates.


There’s also a new activation method in MAS (Microsoft Activation Scripts) that enables the commercial ESU with 3 more years of updates. The regular consumer ESU just gets you 1 more year of security updates.


Wouldn’t that only apply the change to the terminal session? I think you’d need to log out and log back in for it to apply to the desktop session.


Launchers
Tools


Here’s another tool to import music metadata to musicbrainz.


Partial upgrades are unsupported on Arch Linux.


You can change the update notification frequency somewhere in settings. Pretty sure you can disable it too.


Is sshd really not part of systemd?
Yes, it’s not a part of systemd. By running systemctl restart sshd you are just restarting the sshd systemd service. Systemd service files for things like ssh and transmission come with their respective packages.
You can see what I mean here. The openssh-server package for Ubuntu comes with the sshd.service file.


It has a dedicated eclipse drawing tool.


The PCs at my college has only 4GB of RAM with Windows 10. I hate having to use them cause they are so slow.


Double clicking to open is the default now.
My bash prompt is just me copying the prompt I have set on fish.
# Prompt
green=$'\e[38;5;2m'
bright_red=$'\e[38;5;9m'
bright_green=$'\e[38;5;10m'
reset=$'\e[0m'
prompt_command()
{
local exit_status=$?
if [[ $exit_status != 0 ]]; then
exit_color=$bright_red
exit_prompt=" [$exit_status]"
else
exit_color=$bright_green
exit_prompt=""
fi
}
PROMPT_COMMAND=prompt_command
PS1='\[$green\]\w\[$exit_color\]$exit_prompt\n❯ \[$reset\]'

I have a small issue with this prompt though. Sometimes the ❯ ends up turning white for some reason.



I haven’t had any issues with the kernel yet. The worst thing that I can remember doing is messing up the systemd boot entry on my Arch Linux install.


Yeah. I just found out about it by accident when I ran it with the --help flag.


I’d like to add that you can setup desktop shortcuts pretty easily for Mullvad and TOR browser manual installs. For TOR browser simply run this after opening a terminal in the folder it was extracted to:
./start-tor-browser.desktop --register-app
Same thing should work for mullvad.


Containers within a pod can use localhost to access each other. Containers outside of the pod needs to use the pod name to access the containers in the pod.


I looked up when pasta became the default networking backend for rootless and it seems to have been with podman 5.0. I do remember using podman 5.x versions, so I was most likely using pasta.
The reason why I seperated each app into their own network was indeed for security. The only container with access to all the networks is the reverse proxy.
The original release of cave story is free.
https://www.cavestory.org/download/cave-story.php