

CSS can actually do a lot. Many effects that are often done trough JS can also be done with CSS.
CSS can actually do a lot. Many effects that are often done trough JS can also be done with CSS.
Not compared to me, compared to the political parties where I live. From what I’ve read about them, the USA’s Democrats are, at best, comparable to center-right parties here.
I’m not saying that they’re the same, they’re just both right-wing.
I mostly meant that a 2 party system consisting of 2 right-wing parties & a horrible voting sysem doesn’t exactly scream “functioning democracy” to me.
What could that mysterious white liquid be?
Has a functioning democracy ever feel like this
TIL the USA has had a functioning democracy.
Don’t forget Self
, the type of self
.
I’m currently traveling through time at 0.00027̅ h/s.
What about μc or nc, a bit umder 300m/s & 3m/s, respectively.
I’d still say that it’s better.
With “delete after reading”, the recipient has to delete the email manually, so the email is kept if no action is taken. But with the methods listed in the post, the content disappears unless action is taken to save it in some form.
Yes, the content can be easily saved & you should never trust that no clients are malicious, but people are forgetful & lazy. If you need the recipient to perform an action each time, there’s a good chance that they won’t.
I still understand your point. You can’t get around the analog gap unless you transmit everything directly ro the brain. And even if you could do that, with text, it’s easy to reproduce from memory.
camera phones
Why are all “modern” phones so full of cameras? One on the fucking screen & at least 2 on the back. I just want a phone with no cameras. Even 1 might be O.K., so long as it’s on the phone’s backside.
Isn’t 300lb approximately equal to 1 stackoverflow user?
(I’m not USAian, so my conversion may have higher error bars than usual)
If the grahical app store has asked for a password when updating, like on normal Fedora (what Nobara is based on), all programs installed with sudo dnf install <program(s)>
are also updated. A update to native packages can also be ran with sudo dnf upgrade
. Flatpaks can be updated from the app store or with flatpak update
. (no sudo, as that just raises the privileges for the next command, like dnf)
Linux has become more user-friendly, but due to the many, many alternatives for pretty much everything, while some programs integrate well with each other, this is not the case for everything, sadly.
Sorry, I don’t know about the scroll issue. The scroll wheel on a mouse or dragging 2 fingers on a touchpad should still work.
TL;DR:
If you are prompted for a password when updating, everything’s fine. This should be the case for you, as Nobara is based on Fedora, which supports this. Otherwise, you have to run sudo dnf upgrade
or the equivalent for your distributions’s package manager.
There are a few common ways to distribute software for Linux, which I’ll try to explain while leaving out the more complicated parts:
So, how you installed a program may change how it works a bit. For example, the versions of dependencies you have can change the program’s behaviour. Also, some configuration can often be done when compiling a program, like specifying whether to use Qt or GTK for drawing windows, or disabling bluetooth support. Different packagers (people who make appimages, flatpaks and/or paclage files) may choose different options here.
Sometimes flatpak programs may use old versions of dependencies. Also, I’m not sure if this is the case with Firefox, but Chromium’s (Google chrome & derivatives, like Brave) sandboxing (security things) conflict with flatpak’s own, so some of Chromium’s security features are disabled in favor of using flatpak’s own ones.
If the flatpak version of Firefox caused issues, I’d recommend trying the native version (package manager) instead of one downloaded from the internet. You can either do this from the graphical app store by selecting something like native, dnf or rpm instead of flatpak, or the native package manager with sudo dnf install firefox
for Nobara, I think. Unlike flatpaks, native programs are installed for all users & require you to type your password during installation.
If you use an appimage or manually downloaded .rpm file, you need to take care of updates manually, by downloading a newer version like you did during installation. I would strongly advise against this, unless necessary & you know exactly what you’re doing.
I think this answered your question, but feel free to ask if anything was unclear or you have other questions. I’m a programmer & I’ve used Linux for a while, so I should be able to answer most questions.
Edit:
Sorry for the wall of text. I hope it wasn’t too jargony.
TL;DR:
The wall of text has context & things that might br good to keep in mind, but I’d recommend removing the flatpak version & the Linux .exe equivalent you’re using, then trying sudo dnf install firefox
.
Edit 2:
Nvidia can sometimes cause problems on Linux, but if a different version of Firefox worked, it is very likely not the case here. Sometimes switching from Wayland to X11 or vice versa might help a bit, at least until the next driver update. Otherwise, I’d recommend Wayland, as it’s more secure, actively developed, has fancy features X11 lacks & can be a bit more efficient.
Glad you found a way around the problem!
Not sure if I’ll be of help, but I can try. It would help to get some more information.
You’re using the Breeze cursor theme, so I’ll assume you’re using KDE Plasma. The cursor looks like it’s from Breeze 5, not 6, are you on the old Plasma 5? If you are on Plasma, you can go to settings and go to “System information” (near the bottom) or something like that. (IIRC, It was a long time ago since I last used it)
Are you using an Intel, AMD or Nvidia GPU?
Are you on X11 or Wayland? (They’re different ways to handle windows, X11 is very old, but may work better in some cases. Wayland is newer, more secure, has some features that X11 lacks, like HDR & is usually better)
You can check the windowing system (X11/Wayland) by opening the terminal (the application Konsole on Plasma) and typing echo $WAYLAND_DISPLAY
and pressing enter. If you only get an empty line, you’re on X11, otherwise you’re on Wayland.
If you’re on Wayland, go to the URL about:support
in Firefox. Then search (ctrl+f) for Window Protocol
. This should be Wayland, otherwise it’s falling back to a X11 compatibility layer called Xwayland.
If only moonlight could use the USB connection, like vitastick.
Do the triggers from bluetooth controllers work with moonlight? I don’t remember if you can normally connect controllers to the vita, but there’s this plugin that makes the vita think that it’s a pstv, which makes it support multiple gamepads.
I haven’t used moonlight on the vita, can you map touch input to L2/R2/L3/R3? The back touch-area would probalby be good for the triggers & L3/R3 aren’t used that often, so the touchscreen might work for that.
What’s the latency like?
Neither, bat or neovim.
If they have it on a hat, in real life, then it’s linked to their real identity. They might just want to keep it separate from Lemmy.