

Don’t threaten me with a good time


Don’t threaten me with a good time


userContent.css is absolutely essential for me. I use that to limit the size of images on Thunderbird.
It works.
Which is a quality of standard that Windows does not maintain. I wouldn’t wish that garbage on my worst enemy.


How? It’s not even a monospace font


There’s also mp3gain, but this looks better maintained


Web services which are more than likely running on Linux servers…
Is the website old enough to be online?


Golden Kamuy
I use tmux for ssh sessions. Still have a DE on the main system, though. Running tmux with tmux would be wild.
Somewhere between 6-7. I follow issue trackers but spend more time implementing other peoples’ fixes than adding my own code. I also maintain dozens of systems at my workplace.
Files in the folder containing the rest of the data. Like cutting the folder name in half and having the rest of it as the filename of a .txt file inside it.
Lots of options on Linux.
Maybe as a workaround you could add loose files with the rest of the filename and metadata into the folder, if you’re only dealing with long folder names?


Last time I set up Mint the only thing I needed the terminal for was to disable a setting on Java 8 that prevented it from launching on Xfce.
I didn’t need to use the terminal to do that, though. It just didn’t feel right editing a system config file with a GUI text editor.


Lots of indie and retro games play fine without a GPU
Situation is dire, AAA games are growing more unsustainable by the day

gallery-dl works great for archiving twitter media. Not sure how useful it’d be on text posts, though.
For me, it’s date +%s


Thunderbird on desktop, RSSHub to generate feeds for sites that don’t support it


Lemmy communities have RSS feeds


Weirdly, Debian currently has a newer version of Xfce than Linux Mint. Not everything on there is out of date.
I always type sync into the terminal after copying large amounts of files to external storage. One time it didn’t unmount properly. Never again.
There’s also a CLI interface accessible through
cvlc