So, I’m not alone… Thank you!
So, I’m not alone… Thank you!
If it kills your cells, it can’t be bad, right?
Reminds me of this website happily reporting that you should eat curcuma because curcumin was shown (?) to be a possible cellular anti-proliferating… 🤦
Some people did, look up the Peer Community Journal. Backed up by more and more organisations.
I tried Windows ToGo on a few USB keys (including two high-speed ones), never managed to get something I could actually use that was not laggy AF, to the point it’s not usable (dozens of minutes to boot, lags of entire minutes and so on). Did I do something wrong?
@superfes@lemmy.world @Andy@programming.dev @thingsiplay@beehaw.org
After exploring all solutions, and fighting a few things to build either Hawck or Espanso on openSUSE (I’m not a dev), I finally managed to find instructions to get Espanso to build (it’s all there, fellow desperate random reader of the future). Since you can define the keyboard layout AND the variant of said keyboard you are using with Espanso, it’s working as expected.
So now, I’ve associated “:$” with “|>”, not sure how well that’ll work in the future, but it’s far easier to type on my keyboard at least… Also, I gained a tool to insert greek symbols and smileys everywhere that I didn’t know I needed, but very quickly adopting! 😅
Thanks all for your help!
Hm, I don’t think it works, because as far as I understand, wl-paste
is outputting the content of clipboard into stdout, not actually “pasting” the content (or at least, I can’t make it paste something outside of stdout, maybe I’m being thick).
Interesting take! Worth a shot!
Looks interesting. I’m not entirely sure it can output two keys since it’s a remapper, but I’ll dig into more details tomorrow, thanks!
Seems interesting. I’m happy if it works with just as a text replacement. Seems a bit of a pain to install though! 😅
I’ll have a look in more details tomorrow! Cheers!
Yeah, I tried this way, but due to the issue with keyboard layout, ydotool does not output |>, but some gibberish instead. I couldn’t reverse-engineer how to make it output a proper |>.
There’s now a separated luminosity applet that will change brightness if you scroll on it (normally, didn’t check, I’m on my phone).
That’s exactly the goal of Peer Community In: you put your paper on some archive, you ask a “Recommender” to recommend the paper, they select reviewers and the lot, and they decide to recommend or not your paper after some iteration of the process (classical peer review I’d say). Then you can update your paper in a final version, with a kind of stamped version saying it was recommended by XXX (the peer review process is published along as well, I believe).
There’s a desktop edition of OnlyOffice FYI.
I love Linux Libertine. An excellent font for professional looking documents!
Sure did, yes!
Not particularly security savvy, but :
The infected devices then attempt to crack the telnet password by guessing default and commonly used credential pairs.
My understanding is that the worm is targetting connected devices with supidly simple credentials, which is why “Internet-of-Things” is mentioned?
I raise to you the current version of openSUSE Tumbleweed: 20240108! I think we’ve got the winner…
Thanks! I found something interesting, a function named icalfilter
from the ical2html package in Debian/Ubuntu. Very easy to use to filter by categories. Unfortunately, this same package does not exist for openSUSE, but worse case scenario, I can use my Debian server to work on those ICS files.
“Epigenetics shows…” cries in evolutionary biology having demonstrated inter-generational plasticity for more than 30 years, totally ignored by molecular geneticists who discovered after everybody else that everything is not about DNA