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If I were a politician and found out a malicious actor like russia or china supports me, I would re-evaluate my whole campaign, plans and program. It’s an indicator there’s something in it that will harm my country.
If I were a politician and found out a malicious actor like russia or china supports me, I would re-evaluate my whole campaign, plans and program. It’s an indicator there’s something in it that will harm my country.
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–exclude works reliable for me. can you give us an example of an --exclude and the file name that tar outputs when adding it?
Windows, macOS and a ton of other Linux distros do that as well.
First of all, windows and macOS are not for free. They cost extra money, sometimes hidden in the PC cost when pre-installed. When they do a major update, like Win10 to 11, you are at their mercy, if your license can be used to upgrade. Often it can, but sometimes your PC is not “Windows 11 ready” or so and then you get updates for your old system for a few more years until they drop you like a hot potato and throw you to the malware wolves.
Additionally, in Windows the automatic updates are just for the OS itself and some apps from its store. A few apps like Chrome and FF install their own extra update service on top. A lot of other programs check for updates individually or some not at all and often you have to download and run their installer for every update. Idk how it is in macOS tho. Haven’t used it in years.
Yes, a ton of other Linux distros also have background unattended-upgrade or similar. However, the people who choose Ubuntu over those are usually looking for a quick solution that almost always just installs without problems. They usyally don’t have time or patience for any complications, however small. So they choose the fire-and-forget Linux and additionally have greater chances to find a fix or help in the super rare case it doesn’t work, because the bigger user base increases the likelyhood someone else is familiar or has infos regarding that exotic issue.
it’s kinda the fire-and-forget of OSes. you just press the update/upgrade button when the unattended-upgrade didn’t catch all and it just works for free and forever.
i used symlinks first, but they break when you rename target files or directories.
as long as it’s one file system, hard links work better for me. so one day i replaced them all with hard links.
maybe koreader has an error and that causes the autologin session to end and you go to login.
another problem could be another login thingy started first and greetd can’t use the tty. check inittab
i have different directories named after moods/styles filled with hard links to my music. works better than playlists for me
You can always boot from a live medium, chroot into it and fix stuff, e.g. a live USB or CD/DVD. They can be created from Windows.
i have a loooong list of things i’d expect in exchange. (freedom for uighurs, no harrassing neighbour regions/countries, stop cyberattacks, no supporting russia, etc. etc.)
make sure to make the first backup before you use deduplication. just in case it goes sideways
nobody in EU and Ukraine cares what russua demands or cares about. that ship has sailed.
i just read the title and it sounds like it will freeze people to death
this is just systemds way of telling you to listen to me when i say you gotta make backups
They should never have done it in the first place, but seeing how it takes them so long to kill mostly unarmed civilians doesn’t exactly qualify them to attack another region, but whatever gets bibi to play the victim and the strong man at the same time and keeps his right wing friends happy, i guess.
don’t share /boot
it contains stuff from the distro for booting and configuring/installing a boot loader. if both garble their stuff in there it will likely break.
well, at least nothing is reliable and free.
the world feels like 75% assholes rn ngl
Strange