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not_fond_of_reddit

@ not_fond_of_reddit @lemm.ee

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Joined
3 yr. ago

  • But isn’t the whole trinity thing God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit the same entity? So God sacrificed himself for himself… wouldn’t really call a two day nap for some eternal being a sacrifice either.

  • And lobotomies…

  • Hey… if it follows number pattern… the next stage in the crisis should be about ten years away… so that’s cool right?

  • Trouble sleeping…

  • So you can enable it and then run:

    sudo fwupdmgr get-updates

    And you will get a list of what would be updated with the testing repo, and then you can disable it again if it doesn’t return a result that one can work with.

  • You could try enabling the lvfs test-repo

    sudo fwupdmgr enable-remote lvfs-testing

    And the run

    sudo fwupdmgr update

  • If I can at least help on stranger on the internet… well, then I have helped one stranger on the internet 😂

  • Let’s say you want to test a drive that is mounted on /tmp… you just cd into that directory and you can use my example.

    You can use

    $> df -h or $> mount

    to check how your drive is mounted in the OS Most ”default ” installations will have 1-4 partitions and / being partition 3 or 4.

    So if you look at the mount command and / is /dev/sdX3 (where X can be a-z depending on how many drives you have connected) and no other mounts are in the output then every directory under / is on that drive… so you can run my example from your home-directory if you fancy that.

  • The cool thing about rsync is that it goes ”BRRRRRRRRR!” like a warthog… the plane… and it can saturate the receiving drive or array depending on your network and client. And getting 180 with rsync.. on a SATA drive, can’t really hope for more.

    And you can run a quick n dirty test is using dd

    $> dd if=/dev/zero of=1g-testfile bs=1g count=1

  • If you use scp (cp over ssh) you should see the transfer speed.

  • Oh, /e/ is a really good suggestion.

    There is always the route of compiling your own kernel, it all depends on how adventurous you feel… and how much spare time you have.

    Edit: /e/OS has a quite big selection of phones if you just drill down into their docs

  • Yeah, I should have been more specific, “Check out LineageOS, they have a list of supported devices, you can also trawl xda-developers for info and guides”

  • Check out LineageOS and have a look at the xda developer forum for more info.

    And I did a quick search that listed a few good starting points… running a custom rom on your phone is quite liberating… but also a rabbit hole that is deeper than any black hole in the universe. Have fun and good luck!

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=custom+rom+cat+s75+xda+-samsung+-galaxy

    Edit: ‘cause autocorrect

  • Actually never did, tried Logseq and found that the sweet spot of being to lazy and having what I need in obsidian made me stick with it

  • It would have been a tad easier to believe this if it wasn’t for… well everything

  • I took a look at Logseq, and probably switching from Obsidian to that.

  • Ok, so this is a ”how many colors of the rainbow there are”

    If you go balls to the wall, all out retardation: Nextcloud, the CalDAV is basically just a bonus, I’ve replaced google.com at home with Nextcloud

    Some middle ground: SoGo, sogo.nu

    If you just want to solve this specific problem: Radicale, https://radicale.org and Baikal, https://sabre.io/baikal/