I use my mice at over 20k dpi, and for the longest time the sensors got increasingly more accurate but still had the rare wiggle. Especially with cars driving by.To stop my system waking I first started turning the mouse upside down, but later instead propped it half up on the rim of my keyboard. That latter is really quite convenient, might also work for you.
As long as you don't run out of memory, you can actually insert and lookup in O(1) time for a known space of values (that we have). Therefore we do get the quadratic speedup, that when dealing with bits of keysize or entropy means cutting it in half.Checking to get a specific uuid takes 128bit, so 2128 draws of a uuid. Putting all previous uuids into a table we expect a collision in 64bit, so 264. We also need about that much storage to contain the table, so some tens of exabytes.
In a way that weakens the open source software world by giving companies a way to avoid the GPL license of linux.For really no reason, this project gains nothing from being MIT instead of GPL.
I think they mostly are.Cache is already in .cache/mozilla, so usually there is no change hence I didn't mention it. They did move the cache to the XDG_CACHE_HOME by default. And yes they are using the XDG variables including the recommended fallback values.
The line between data and config has always been blurred, Most data in the browser is "data" until a user overrides it. Even extension files presence is linked with their configured state of being installed.For log files I'm not sure anyone follows that. Besides firefox barely has any plain logs, I think having those in the profile is fine.Currently it's all in XDG_CONFIG_HOME
In practice that should mean running mv ~/.mozilla ~/.config/mozilla.Of course the old directory will still be detected and used if present, probably for a long time to come.
I still use X forwarding.It works just fine using xWayland, and X forwarding has always been so janky there is no chance to notice any difference caused from using xWayland instead of native.
It will surely take many years and well established wayland native remote tunneling before anyone thinks of ditching xWayland.
You'd either need to use microwaves to get the heat in deeper, or go with a lower temperature and longer time while somehow preventing dryout, maybe steaming it somewhat.
I use my mice at over 20k dpi, and for the longest time the sensors got increasingly more accurate but still had the rare wiggle. Especially with cars driving by.To stop my system waking I first started turning the mouse upside down, but later instead propped it half up on the rim of my keyboard. That latter is really quite convenient, might also work for you.