Not really. .
and ..
are the only standard directory entries that are added by the system.
Some shells may extrapolate from that by adding to go two directories up, but
can just as well be the name of an actual file or directory.
Not really. .
and ..
are the only standard directory entries that are added by the system.
Some shells may extrapolate from that by adding to go two directories up, but
can just as well be the name of an actual file or directory.
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Seems like more of a human mistake – like one of the designers used a stock image of a clock spiral that was AI-generated…
Browser integration works on my machine, which also uses Wayland, so unless you’re, say, running Firefox from a flatpak or something, I don’t see why it shouldn’t work.
It seems like on Invidious, the default setting is to still have the end user load the video directly from YouTube, whereas Piped defaults to proxying the video through its server as well. I would imagine this makes Piped servers a lot more noticable to YouTube.
Development hasn’t stopped, it’s just that they haven’t made new releases. I would suggest you install one of the dev builds instead.
If you paste in the complete URL to a meeting (“https://example.org/FourRandomEnglishWords” instead of “FourRandomEnglishWords”) or use the “Open in App” link that a meeting’s web page shows, then there’s no need to.
Yes, the mobile app supports third-party servers, though I wouldn’t call it complicated.
If you want to join a room, all you do is type/paste the full URL to it instead of just the name. “Open in App” functionality will also work regardless of the server.
If you want to host one on a third-party server, you just go into the options and replace the “https://meet.jit.si” address with one of the third-party server. Then when you create a room, it will use that server.
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Oh no, yet more work for the Asahi Linux team…
Personally I wouldn’t get rid of my primary source of funding without having a ready replacement during a time of financial trouble, but they do them, I guess…
It not only is still an option, it’s the default option.
DuckDuckGo for me personally.
What the heck is a “unicorn social app”?
For a moment I forgot that “lakh” is a number that means 10000 100000 and was thinking “who are the Lakh Indians”?
I guess this is an interesting contrast to Windows, where not only certain characters (like ? or * or |) are banned, but also entire filenames that used to refer to device files in DOS (con, prn, lpt1, etc.)