

It’ll depend on the laptop of course but I did this a few years back by putting a M.2 drive in a spare slot my laptop had.
It’ll depend on the laptop of course but I did this a few years back by putting a M.2 drive in a spare slot my laptop had.
What kind of files are you wanting to keep?
You can partition or preferably install a second drive and install Linux on that. You can then access your files on the other drive/partition and connect your Steam library to your existing library without any issues*. Want to go back to Windows? Just boot into it and your updated files will be there.
*Only thing is you’ll need to either disable fast boot on Windows or shut down by using the restart option or else the Windows drive is locked to read only.
Hope you’re feeling okay this morning Mr. Linksys, I love your username!
What does it say under the Languages section for that repo?
Ubuntu Pro price hikes hitting us all hard.
If you’ve got Immich hosted already I’d leverage that to be able to share with others. What do you mean by tunneling into a web URL?
For sharing with others, Tailscale is free for 10 users and is very easy to setup on your computer. The problem is that it requires the end user to download an app and login which is definitely a friction point.
I only use it in the browser to join meetings because an external client uses it. But in my experience it’s buggy whereas Slack and Zoom just work.
You wouldn’t typecast a car.
The real solution comes forward.
“gut: command not found” is a common output in my terminal.
FreshLight thinks you’re super weird.
What I stand up in AWS I don’t know how it works. How an I going to expect a hacker to figure it out?
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I do the opposite, I forget I can just create a file with nano. I run touch then open it with nano after to edit.
Bet it adds { on the next line.
It’s been a minute since I used C/Cpp but if you compile with debugging symbols and using gdb give you info like in Java? At least the location of the crash.
It was/is an extension so you would’ve had to explicitly search for and install it to see it.
The dude who made VSCode Stories sold it for some cash.
If you get frustrated by something you’re writing, crumpling it into a ball gets out frustration by destroying the work and then it’s easier to toss into a garbage can.
Tailscale and being at my house is the only two ways in so I feel those are pretty good for me.