We all have a final deadline for finishing our backlog and experiencing as much as we can in this world.
Yes, please. Missed RightsCon this year.
This is the script. /home/deck/scripts/fstab
contains my customised fstab file.
Yes, after an update, I just run this script once.
#!/bin/bash
if [ ! -f ~/.config/kdesurc ];then
touch ~/.config/kdesurc
echo "[super-user-command]" > ~/.config/kdesurc
echo "super-user-command=sudo" >> ~/.config/kdesurc
fi
if [ ! -f /var/mnt/nas ];then
sudo -c 'sudo mkdir "/var/mnt/nas"'
fi
sudo cp -a /home/deck/scripts/fstab /etc/fstab
sudo steamos-readonly disable
sudo pacman -Syy
sudo pacman-key --init
sudo pacman-key --populate
sudo pacman -S --overwrite "*" nfs-utils
sudo steamos-readonly enable
sudo mount -a
Good job. You now have tons of data. Where do you show the ads?
That is correct. The best case is to write a script to make your desired changes, and then run it after each system update.
My own use-case is that I have a NFS mount-point for my Steam Deck to use extra storage on my NAS. After the first time I figured out how to get it mounted, I made a script to disable read-only filesystem, make all the changes to the system, and then re-enable read-only filesystem. After every system update, I just run that script once.
NSFW communities don't show up by default. You can create an account on that instance to view all of them, or visit https://lemmyverse.net/communities to search for your specific interests.
It's pretty easy. Just don't go to lemmynsfw.com. hopefully, we'll get a way to ~~subscribe to~~ block all communities on another instance with a single click at some point to make this easier.
For companies, GDPR applies to people in European Economic Area whose data is used by companies, or companies that have an office in EEA or another stable arrangement in EEA and process personal data of people located anywhere.
Gnome's default file explorer does allow drag and drop to add a directory (folder) to the left sidebar. It just has to go into the middle list on the left sidebar. You cannot add things to the top list by drag and drop. KDE is far far more customisable than Gnome, but changing too many settings can sometimes make KDE unstable. If you choose KDE, try changing only a few settings at a time. Gnome takes the approach of making it more beginner friendly by making it harder to break and providing an experience that Gnome devs think would be the best.