Thanks for sharing.
It does look like there’s a way to use PiHole personally for those who share the network with those who don’t want it: leave default DNS server setttings alone except for your own devices.
Thanks for sharing.
It does look like there’s a way to use PiHole personally for those who share the network with those who don’t want it: leave default DNS server setttings alone except for your own devices.
And if you aren’t home or available?
I quit Sway so rarely that I don’t have a keybinding for it. I have one for suspending/locking instead.
To exit, I use the terminal: swaymsg exit
.
I never type that accidentally, so no warning is needed.
I use KDE Connect on Sway and don’t recall all these extra setup steps.
Each time I want to send or receive from my phone, I open KDE Connect first in Sway and that’s it.
Maybe these extra steps allow you to interact with your laptop before you open KDE Connect?
Does PiHole ever break a family member’s browsing, and then they don’t know to fix the issue because it would involve understanding opening up the PiHole web interface?
I stuck with Ubuntu over a decade, but eventually Arch had several packages I was interested in that Ubuntu did not, plus the Arch wiki. I wanted to use Sway with several rofi/dmenu type utils, and Arch had a lot more of those packaged.
For 60+ I might recommend ChromeOS Flex, Mint, or Ubuntu.
It’s grow lamps simulating full sun brightness in a windowless room.
Sway is highly compatible with i3.
I believe the keysym names should still work.
Class and Title are X11 specific. Wayland has “app_id”. Probably a quick find/replace.
ChromeOS Flex can install and run desktop Linux software and has a terminal. What else makes it Linux-like?
ChromeOS Flex is designed as a desktop OS. Android is not.
ChromeOS Flex. Very low maintenance.
It depends. In Firefox, Chrome and LibreOffice, Shift-Insert pastes the clipboard, not the selection. Viva Linux!
For a shared set of hosts at work, you can check a shared SSH include file into got so changes to the cluster can be updated in one place.
You describing a kill ring which is internal to the shell and not synced to the system clipboard. Nor does it work in GUI apps.
The benefit of universal bindings is not have to learn one method for GUI apps, another for terminals and a third for shells implementing the kill-ring like bindings.
I confirmed that these already supported a number of terminals plus QT and GTK. They could also be mapped to be more ergonomic with a programmable keyboard:
Yes.
There are already settings to change some of the colors used.
For the terminal in particular there is an option to hide the menu bar, making it look as Foot or Alacritty do.
There’s KMonad. Though I tried it once and found it didn’t behave quite like I expected and gave up.
It might be related to earlier attacks on Codeberg because of their open support of diversity, equity and inclusion.