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Oh yeah! Definitely awesome. Bear is great!
Oh yeah! Definitely awesome. Bear is great!
All Along the Watchtower (favorite versions: Jimi Hendrix and Dave Matthews Band)
Looks like some process in your startup scripts (fish profile, etc) have not completed. I have seen this type of thing when NFS mounts are unreachable. Try opening another terminal window… if it does the same thing, press Ctrl+C, then run ps -ef and see what processes are running as you that might be hung
If you guys have gmail accounts, use Google Chat.
Awesome. Thanks for the feedback
This looks awesome. Does anyone have experience with it?
More Than You Know - blink-182
They played it in their most recent tour. Great setlist
The Leftovers was great. The book was a good read too. It’s a unique concept (or felt like one at the time). And Justin Theroux is awesome.
Ooh, yeah. @Kyrgizion@lemmy.world brought up Dark. One of THE best shows. Even if the first season was better than the other two, the whole series was phenomenal.
BEST TV show? Hmmm… Better Call Saul, The West Wing, The Leftovers, The Wire, Friends
lasim worked great for me
That’s what I meant by “dedicated GPU for Gaming” presuming the desktop already had a video card for regular use.
Sure. Why not. The game wouldn’t know you’re in a VM. The GPU is presented to Windows so it SHOULD all just work. There’s plenty on Youtube for getting this to work.
Well, you boot from the Windows install medium. And instead of picking an existing partition to install on, you create a new partition from unpartitioned space
If you have a desktop and can install a dedicated GPU for Gaming, libvirt should be able to game a full speed
As @Vitaly@feddit.uk said, I’d virtualize it if you can. But if there is a reason you want to use actual hardware with Windows (gaming, installing firmware that requires Windows, VR, etc), I’d install a dedicated disk for Windows.
If you can’t do either of those things, look at gparted to resize your partitions.
I use the Notes feature of my Nextcloud instance.
I assume you’re talking about the order in which apps appear when you first launch rofi. That’s in the cache file in ~/.cache as something like rofi3.druncache or rofi-3.druncache (or both). Delete (or rename) them and see if that addresses your issue.
If you truly mean the config file, it’s in ~/.config/rofi. Delete or rename to see if it fixes your issue