Linux hobbyist, Machinist and tinkerer
But can it run doom?
Based dude May he rest in piece as a fucking legend
Bro you dont wana be bottom stream, Theres lots of daemons
Lmao
There is another That you might say is a little rusty
First Are you using bluebuild? There a many forks of custom image starting point. Secondly if your usijg bluebuild template. All files that specify packages and what modules should be on the recipes folder. Using recipe.yml is a very good starting point as you can specify how to install a package and what package manger to use. IE brew, rpm-ostree
You can also add modles which you can take the bluebuild template and add a modules folder in the main tree. Bluebuild has premade modules, aswell as documentation to make a cutom module.
And to answer your first question directly use recipe.yml in the recipes folder to specify other .yml files to be used in building. Secondly the best you can get is githubs builder in the actions tab, however some errors are BLOODY USELESS BECAUSE THERE WRONG. I have had a few times where it complained about not having a - at the top of a module. Even though there was one there, i eventually solved it after rewriting a part of my .yml i belive it was a formating issue
No see he loves snaps so much he made a utility to unistall it To reinstall it again!
Yeah no snaps are a bad format they are not FOSS in my book.
I recently switched to bazzite. What i ended up doing was using bluebuild and making my own github repo. Which takes the newest version of bazzite upstream and strips out flatpaks i dont want or certain packages. And installs some i want. The documentation could use some work but its a great concept
https://blue-build.org/learn/getting-started/
https://github.com/Steamymoomilk/yboxproworkstation
And my repo if you need insperation and or help with configuring bluebuild feel free to ask!
Im still trying to figure out how to make it automatically take distrobox assemble distrobox.ini and setup my distroboxes
And to answer your question with bluebuild you can take bazzite-dx and set that as your image in recipe.yml and then specify what packages you want added via brew, flatpak, or rpm-ostree or removed
Best i can do is chineese bootleg subway surfers riddled with malware and ads.
deleted by creator
Windows xp > windows 7 > windows 10 > manjaro (broke it with the aur) > arch (broke again) > kbuntu > fedora > fedora silverblue > Nixos > Gentoo
Now i compile with 14 core xeon 2697 v3 48gb of ram and vega 64. Peak machine and distro
Yessss my brother of the Gentooo EMERGE MY BROTHER!
O no hes over heating!
If you build from github it works in kitty and crashes if you scroll to fast. It kinda works, hope they rewrite it
I mostly use terminal unironically. Duf (to check system storage) Youtube-tui (written in rust tui for youtube) Btop (for system management) Iftop (see where my pc is calling to) Tuptime (has full system uptime from install to now. It just for fun to see how long my system has been alive)
Ive also gotten into atuin to find command i used and cant remember the command.
Also obligatory Megalist of terminal apps
Have you ever tried grayjay? Its like freetube but pipes into all services like twitch, odysse,rumble, kick And youtube. All into one app Its also is open sourced
Or from source
I belive hes refering to lenovos bios blocks certain wifi cards? I remember before buying my t440p i watched a stupid amount of videos of people moding them. Some of which were bios mods for newer wifi cards.
My death insurance gonna be real big if steam refunds all games. Family gonna be rich Steam sale is crack
This may be a stupid question. But are you using grub and have nomodeset? Sometimes DE’s have problem with xorg setting monitor settings, which you then half to override somewhere in the init of the DE
–edit
Heres a work around.
https://askubuntu.com/questions/513036/how-do-you-change-display-resolution-of-vmware-player-in-kde-plasma-5#717471
"I have the same issue and have the following workaround:
It is possible to set the resolution from a command line using ‘xrandr’. Running just xrandr allows you to see the current resolution and the other valid resolutions.
From a command line you can run ‘xrandr -s 1024x768’ and the screen in VMware will reset to that size!
You can even set this at KDE startup by doing the following:
click KDE start icon
select System Settings
select Startup and Shutdown
click Add Program…
enter ‘xrandr -s 1024x768’ in the text box
be sure the “run in Terminal” checkbox is checked
follow the rest of the prompts to set it as a startup command.
The next time you log in, it will start at 800x600 but at the end of the login you will see the screen resize!
"