It’s possible that the log writer wanted to fseek
to the end of the file and write something, but the target pointer value was somehow corrupted. Depending on the OS, the file might end up having a fuckton of zeroes in the skipped part.
I take my shitposts very seriously.
It’s possible that the log writer wanted to fseek
to the end of the file and write something, but the target pointer value was somehow corrupted. Depending on the OS, the file might end up having a fuckton of zeroes in the skipped part.
What do you mean? That guy is clealy…
(sunglasses)
…playing with spirits.
Instructions unclear, entire class is now sentient dust sealed inside their armor.
So? There’s nothing preventing someone from installing either, and they’re adding Wayland support to Cinnamon.
Switching to Ubuntu is way, way better than staying on Windows.
That being said, Ubuntu is maintained by the Canonical company, and they have made some really sus decisions in the past. Things like putting ads in the application launcher and then trying to gaslight people when the inevitable backlash arrived.
The meme above refers to Canonical’s own Snap packaging format (think of it like UWP/Microsoft Store apps vs. “regular” Win32 apps), and the way they’re pushing for its adoption. Snap is installed by default on Ubuntu and official Ubuntu flavors. You can uninstall it manually, but Canonical has modified the APT package manager so that when an application is available as a Snap package, it automatically installs the Snap back-end and the application as a Snap package without notifying the user (instead of installing the .deb
-packaged applications, which is what happens on all other distributions that use APT). Canonical recently also ordered that official Ubuntu flavors (which are maintained by independent groups) can’t include Flatpak, a universal packaging format that directly competes with Snap, in their default installations.
Bro, that is literally the first comment on the post! None of the solutions were posted when it was made.
They’re wrong, but you are just being a dick.
XWayland has something called a “rootful mode” where it opens an X11 session as a window nested inside a Wayland session. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ij3rsqX2pKQ XWayland will be started as your own user, but maybe you could use sudo -u ...
to set a different user.
The other possibility is to switch to another terminal session with a different user, start an X11 session with startx
, and use x11vnc -listen 127.0.0.1 -forever -passwd PASS1234
to run a VNC server that’s only accessible from the local machine.
I watch the Daily Silksong News. Tomorrow, for sure…
it’s okay, just tell the AI to reproduce that image one-to-one. The result definitely doesn’t have enough human authorship to qualify for protection.
Doesn’t mean they stopped pushing their own shit in places that they have no business touching. I mean:
> apt install firefox
> look inside
> snap
Ah, so this is what a cognitohazard feels like!
VS’s built-in .NET debugger is top tier, though. Especially the ability to edit code while it is running.
I wouldn’t consider it a “hack”, but I’m always baffled by the number of people who don’t use any kind of content blocker on the web, then complain about full-page ads, pop-ups, and autoplay videos. It’s like going to a cheap motel with a lady of the night without bringing condoms.
Time-based one-time passwords. It’s been used for years for multi-factor authentication.
…except manage the game’s environment, download and install local files and updates, validate those files to make sure they’re not compromised, provide an API for service integration in games, manage middleware like Gamescope or Wine…
It would be like banning all loud and annoying freight trucks inside city limits, and then wondering why food doesn’t show up in stores anymore.
Our generation would have at least done something creative, like smear shit all over a bathroom stall, or leave scorch marks on the ceiling from deodorant flamethrowers, or scratch up a window with the teacher’s quartz crystal… Kids today don’t have the same spirit.
Like I said, all I needed was visual indentation. C# doesn’t have significant whitespaces. As long as you account for all of the braces and semicolons, you could write an entire program in a single line.
It was school work. All I needed was some proper visual indentations and a monospaced font.
Theoretically, yes. Theoretically NTFS supports sparse files, but I don’t know if the feature is enabled by default.