just white wine
Come on you’re going to hurt the wine snobs with this statement. Champagne is a sparkling wine, it doesn’t taste like any white wine. It’s more like a bitter Sprite with alcohol in it.
just white wine
Come on you’re going to hurt the wine snobs with this statement. Champagne is a sparkling wine, it doesn’t taste like any white wine. It’s more like a bitter Sprite with alcohol in it.
You might consider looking into other shells. Fish has things such as nor requiring escaping variables with spaces and defining abbreviations that can work anywhere in a command line.

It’s quite nice to browse that way actually, outside of the nostalgia effect, idk why exactly but it gives me more motivation to explore topics. Also I was thinking that perhaps not being able to open a folder in a new window might be a feature, I’m less tempted to open too many tabs at the same time.


This looks like to me that you might have flatpaks installed in your home on the second laptop, while all your flatpaks must be installed system wide on the first one.
You can see what is installed system or user side with
flatpak --user list
flatpak --system list
As for the additional directories purpose, app contains the apps (surprising i know), runtime the runtimes needed by the apps (such as say the org.kde.Platform for kde apps etc), exports the things that are exported for integration (like a bin dir you can add to PATH or the applications dir containing the .desktop files to launch apps from the desktop etc. appstream is a metadata format about apps i’m not sure exactly what they put in that dir, some cache maybe ?


and massive kaiju
Yeah, sometimes they are bad, but sometimes they are protector, or kind of in the middle, a metaphor for the forces of nature bigger than life whatever. So it balances out.


*and being that rich.
Sad thing is that Linux used to be ahead on phones. Everyone swore by N900 and it was sabotaged by ms buykilling Nokia.
If you have myhostname set for hosts in /etc/nsswitch.conf it shall take care of this for you (should be the default on most systemd distros I believe? not sure)


“Magicx Zero 40” i believe. Seem kinda nice.
What are you on to consider a feature for adding remote play to an already multiplayer game to be the only thing you need for multiplayer ? This might not be hidden at all but it’s also not what you advertised at all. Perhaps consider actual game devs might know a thing or two before thinking doing a uni project entitles you to be so consescending.