Element/matrix does indeed have a web version. You can use https://app.element.io, or you can self host the web client.
Element/matrix does indeed have a web version. You can use https://app.element.io, or you can self host the web client.
100% this. Everything else is just a distraction meant to divide us so we cannot effectively act against them.
Our two party, first past the post system is fucking awful.
Not exactly what you’re looking for, but mysudo may work for what you want to do.
Man I miss basic.
For me, it was A Quiet Place. I found it incredibly dumb and impossible to believe that nobody on the whole of the planet ever considered that these aliens with ultra incredible hearing weren’t somehow vulnerable to noise? Just dumb as fuck, especially when you consider that sonic weapons already exist and are used, and sound is routinely used in torture/incarceration scenarios.
Awesome! Glad I could help.
At the terminal, go to the directory that contains the mount point for the disk (so if the mount point is /mnt/disk
go to /mnt
.
Run ls -l
. This should list everything in /mnt
with the owners and permissions. If your mount point (in this example disk
) is owned by user and group root
, then you just need to change ownership of the mount point and the disk attached.
With the disk attached, run sudo chown -R user:user disk
Replace each instance ofuser
with your system username (if you’re not sure what you’re username is run whoami
and it will tell you), and replace disk
with your mount point directory.
Here’s what this does:
sudo
: escalates your privileges to run the chown
commandchown
: the utility that allows you to change ownership of files and directories-R
: tells chown
to change ownership recursivelyuser:user
specifies the user and group that will own the files/directories you are modifying.disk
: specifies the file(s)/directories you want to change ownership for.You do need to be careful, but you can check for errors after editing /etc/fstab
by running the command sudo mount -a
. With the drive attached but not mounted. (Also good practice to use the UUID of the drive in the fstab entry)
That command runs through etc/fstab
and attempts to mount everything it is instructed to mount if it is not already mounted. And if there is an error it will let you know.
If you run sudo mount -a
and you get no output in the terminal, then there are no errors, your drive should now be mounted, and you should be fine for reboots and it should mount on startup as expected.
deleted by creator
Instead of using the gui for this, have you tried. creating a mount point and adding an entry to /etc/fstab
?
Edit: fixed stupid autocorrect
Watching sports/sports fandom. I just dont give a fuck about sportsball in any way shape or form.
Can someone eli5 what real time kernel is?
Edit: nvm. Found a good explainer.
I’m currently using Baserow, and so far it suits my needs well enough. I’m not a very demanding user, but part of what I love is how nicely Baserow documents the api. It made it very easy for me to implement some automations I wanted to use to record data.
Edit: fix stupid autocorrect errors
I verified it and it is the genuine ublock origin
Sadly, refreshing doesn’t help me either. I’ve tried.
That’s fair, and I do try as an individual, but also as an individual my efforts are effectively meaningless. The real destroyer is capitalism and I don’t like being a doomer, but, we are fucked.
I used to get that, but now I don’t even get that few seconds.
You could write yourself a bash script to do this.