This is a good way to put it.
Especially relevant now that public spaces are less and less accessible.
bruh. just. what. the. fuck.
Yes, but usually they’d have a more robust VM management system to stay sane for long.
Hopefully this would lead to a more (stable version of) ArchLinux.
Try getting the sddm (for KDE) instead and run it thru the display-manager service.
They’ve been trying to get the GTK3 version of it for like a decade, and now that GTK4 is out, they’re finally getting close to it (but still not out yet).
I used GIMP to make this.
The real meme here
network. manager.
No matrix?
Looking at the replies, I realized I’m too much of a normie for this thread.
Boy, you don’t know what you’re missin’!
Okay, did you change anything, perhaps BIOS settings? You did mention it booted just fine the first time with liveUSB.
It is widely believed that ghosts follows the paths they were taking when they were alive. So if someone sees a ghost walking thru a wall, chances are the wall wasn’t there when that person was still alive.
Are you able to boot to the liveUSB again? If so, you may be able to use it to access the log on that broken installation.
This hits hard.
Not that I don’t like my job, just that I love my costly side-project more.
From experience: not as good as the regular Linux Mint.
Not to mention that sometimes, the code that’s supposed to “speak for itself” doesn’t do the things that they think it would do.
You know, a few hundred years ago, they respect the barriers even less.
Especially to their colonies.