I think it’s random - Steam asked me to participate today when I opened it, but the last time that happened was a long time ago…
I went from ~140kg when I was in highschool to 68kg today. When I go through an airport, the milimeter-wave scanners usually say I have a hidden object under my shirt and I get hand searched.
congratulations, LA residents! Your bodies have been donated to a corporation for beta testing!
Dictatorship enthusiasts
Installed it on the KDE spin. Discover seemed to choke and crash if I pressed the more info button before it installed the update, but other than that it was smooth and seems to be running well.
I recently bought a projector that I had to trick into not connecting to Wifi by telling it that it was connected to ethernet until it gave up. It will never know the wifi password. It gets an HDMI signal, it shows the HDMI signal, that is its purpose.
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Did I understand it right that you installed the driver manually? It’s generally better to use the Fedora Nvidia driver package (sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia), than to download from Nvidia’s website. I’m on Fedora 40 too, and currently using the 560.35.03 version of the driver on a 2080, which upgraded from 555 recently - I wonder if that’s what broke compatibility with your version of the driver. It may be that you need to update. Only thing I’m not sure of is how this will interact with manually-installed drivers…
I’ve wanted this for a while; when I’m done with my computer, I don’t mind it staying on a bit longer to do this, rather than when I next turn it on when I (presumably) want to do something. Great add!
That will downgrade you from plasma 6 to plasma 5. Not worth it!
after a long period of disuse, the rails turn back into the snakes they were made from
In defense of this warning, when I first put my application on Flathub, I had it because of how file i/o worked (didn’t support XDG portals, so needed home folder access to save properly). It did actually motivate me to get things working with portals to not request the extra permissions and get the green “safe” marker.
A lot of apps will always be “unsafe” because they do things that requires hardware access, though, so I could see them wanting something more nuanced.
If you’re on KDE using Discover for updates, the default on a lot of distros is to apply updates on reboot, but you can change this under the Software Update section of the System Settings app. I think it’s not a bad idea; I’d rather have a bit of controlled downtime than risk borking my system.
Live like Gentoo, cook everything from scratch
I can hardly wait for this plus the v555 Nvidia driver to come to Fedora
what’s the hotdog car made of
There’s an “Enable HDR” checkbox in the “Displays & Monitor” part of System Settings. Of my two monitors, it only shows up in the configuration of the one that supports HDR (makes sense).
I feel bad for the content creators, even if it’s kind of funny to see LTT’s sponsor scam them instead of their audience for once