Ghidra is properly Java, so better luck looking there.
aka @rotopenguin@mastodon.social
Ghidra is properly Java, so better luck looking there.
I’m somewhere between Kitty and Ptyxis.
Wait till you see a Mediatek
The PineTab doesn’t even have a wifi/bt radio that’s supported by its own OS. When you’re an OEM and you’re choosing what chips you’re putting in a design, I think you should stick to chips that are usable. Chips where the manufacturer has written specs and maybe even a driver that transforms “a piece of glass with a lead frame” into something with a purpose.
Anyway, that’s just how I feel.
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Flatseal is the tool.
(Another benefit to using the flatpak version of Steam is that Steam leaks rather substantial chunks of /dev/shm memory. The flatpak automatically cleans that up. God knows why Valve hasn’t fixed this yet.)
The simplest way to opt out is to “install any other OS instead”.
Hahahaha NO
The hard part is finding a stable identifier, instead of “this interface is know as sink 48 at this exact instant. It will be a completely different number tomorrow. It might even be a potato emoji, who knows?”
Might as well go for Win11, you’re going to have to deal with it next year anyways.
Windows doesn’t do minimal, it does whatever the hell it wants. There are some OOBE tricks to get a local account working.
I have used the privacy.sexy app to strip down some of the most obnoxious Win11 bits - be warned that you have to disable defender to have it work. Is it doing bad things? Is MS doing incredibly shady shit with their detections? Who’s to say? When I turn on Defender afterwards, everything seems “fine”.
There’s no need to get rid of grub, or play games with different boot drives. Get to know how EFI works. Look at efibootmgr’s output - that’s pretty much all that the firmware knows. The firmware has multiple entries consisting of a drive (magic device number), a program path (EFI\grub\grub_x64.efi), and maybe a string to pass along. There is a priority list (0003,0001,0002) which MS occasionally likes to re-arrange.
Power management on “the most boring Intel chip imaginable” is still touch-and-go at times.
“Except when something breaks after an odd update once or twice per year”
You don’t need snapshots, except for the moments when you do. The point of snapshots is that they’re so cheap that you can let them roll on their own and only care about them the day your system breaks.
It’s not like they’re stuck on some outdated proprietary engine like RPG Maker. Minetest is under active development, with a small list of dependencies that are also under active development. It is under no particular rush to get off of X11/Xwayland.
Do you have pci-e slots? An nvme to pcie card is cheap - it’s pretty much just passing from one connector shape to another.
And there’s a separate effort called Mineclonia.
I made a systemd script that fires when going to / waking up from sleep - it checks how long the sleep was and if it was just a few seconds, it puts the computer back to sleep.
In hindsight, I think the thing that made it work was bluetooth was somehow responsible for the initial failed suspend. The second shot at sleep happened before bluetooth came back up, so it succeeded.
The memory requirements for virtualization is not negligible.
Fun fact: SFC is short for “Super FamiCom”, a tribute to the last piece of home consumer electronics ever made that just worked without having to fuss with it.
And then you dd the iso to a flash stick, boot it, start into the windows installer, and watch it shit itself because MS can’t even make an iso that just fucking works.
I think “endurance” cards are where you get something reasonably non-self-destructive, for a modest premium.