ah yeah, that’s fair.
i’ve found the fw13 keyboard and the thinkpad xx30 keyboards are pretty good, but even the xx30 ones are extremely dependent on the age and manufacturer, so it’s basically just luck at this point
ah yeah, that’s fair.
i’ve found the fw13 keyboard and the thinkpad xx30 keyboards are pretty good, but even the xx30 ones are extremely dependent on the age and manufacturer, so it’s basically just luck at this point
how do you find the keyboard? I’ve tried typing on a few macbooks but my fingers could never get used to it
kw(h*day)^-1
i think it does global syncing by default
The company
old T (until t440p) you could upgrade the cpu as well, and they are dirt cheap on aliexpress
don’t know if a refurbished thinkpad is good if you’re on a budget, by the time you realise you might have a couple dozen of them on your desk all running linux
just choose something that’s been around for a while, e.g. debian, opensuse, fedora, etc
iirc there’s instructions on completing the anubis challenge manually
everytime you copy paste a terminal command, try see if you can understand what it’s doing with:
$ tldr mycommand (you need tealdeer installed)
and
$ mycommand --help
imo this is way more concise and beginner friendly than reading man pages
nitter.net and stuff are back btw
do two wrongs make a right?
so do they not have the same updates on fwupd/efi updaters?
have a read through this page: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Backlight
it’s pretty extensive and should work on most distros. I think on laptops brightness is usually handled through ACPI so you should probably have a look at that part closely
schizoposting 👍
what if you put a nuke on the building so that the nuke explodes the dropped nuke and protects the bunker
plain debian maybe? it’s a bit more manual but not to the extent of arch, and the netinstaller is really nice
if you are motivated to learn Linux I really can’t recommend trying something basic like debian, arch, alpine etc enough