- 2 Posts
- 35 Comments
I unlocked just a month ago to 2 months ago. Didn’t see this quota, maybe some markets have more restrictions than others.
On your xiaomi account? I never saw that quota thing, is this for the account to have unlocking privileges?
Credits? I didn’t need any credits, I used this, from the official website. I just checked on the fastboot screen (using this program) once in a while for getting the time to unlock the bootloader.
Can you explain a little more?
Yeah, it needs an xiaomi account with unlocking privileges (I have one from 2018, so this step was already done) and a Windows partition with the xiaomi bootloader unlocker (the official one, updated to the last version), then putting a SIM card into the phone, putting the same account on the phone, going to the bootloader unlocker, checking all the boxes and then just waiting for the time it says on the unlocker to unlock the phone, with the SIM card and not changing the account on the phone.
I just added a Windows 10 IoT LTSC partition to do that :/, then deleted it afterwards.
+1 for cachy
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Linux@programming.dev•Does anyone know how to fix this?[SOLVED]
12·10 days agoOne question, does changing icon themes back and forth solve it? (Just trying to guess how to solve this)
Edit: Or this command:
- gsettings reset-recursively org.cinnamon
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Linux@programming.dev•Does anyone know how to fix this?[SOLVED]
41·10 days agoUnfortunately, I think this is a problem on a lot of DEs, had this on budgie, xfce, kde was better, but the only one with consistent tray icons, that I found, was gnome.
The problem seems to be boxing and rescaling the icon, as it comes in 24px, 32px, 64px, etc. Stremio is always BIG on everything too.
I never found one to buy, it seems I would need to sell my kidney to buy one second hand.
Xiaomi smartphones are cheap, but the waiting period is horrible (two weeks now), saying this from my Xiaomi Redmi Note 9s on LineageOS with microg. (I’m actually on my computer right now)
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Firefox@lemmy.ml•Saw this ghacks article for speeding up YouTube on FF and seems to help.
4·14 days agoAnother tip is the YouTube mobile extension. It hides the shorts and is a lot faster than even chrome, but some people might not like it like that. If on a linux tablet just use this link.
To revert to desktop, use this link.
Edit: On ironfox this worked, on librewolf on an intel tablet this made it go like 10 fps.
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?
2·14 days agodeleted by creator
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?
4·14 days agoWhat is your purpose?
Do you just want a job or do you want to program for fun? If you want backend, that’ll be very different than frontend, do you want corporate or startup?
I didn’t care about that, but I think java, for backend would be a first choice, as it has the biggest amount of “it just works with that”.
I think scala is cool too, very modern and with A LOT of less boilerplate, all the JVM support, so it can work with almost anything in the backend, but for working for jobs, it’s not very used.
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?
10·14 days agoThe most used language has the most of the worst code, quarkus is a new framework (and very good), ejbs are enterprise java beans (the worst thing ever made).
I think a lot of the code was written by a lot of people in a rush, very backend of the backend, but EXTREMELY needed. Java is hated (I hate it too), but the new things in it? It’s amazing too (I only love the new stuff).
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?
6·14 days agoGson in the corner murdered:
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?
6·14 days agoit wasn’t funny in any way, but J
SHITBOSS “microservice” (it was a jboss service with one microservice inside, in a kubernetes pod, with only one core, tell me about redundancy). Service classes with over 2000 lines of code, it shouldn’t even be called spaghetti code, more like lasagna code, the pasta came in layers, separation of concerns was a mere suggestion, code was not thread safe (and it needed to be), but there was only 40 Ejbs for each “stateless” service inside de EAR, so number go up, code goes better.I refactored it, it’s now in the glorious quarkus 3.27, on virtual threads and java 21, not hyperbole, but 5x more throughput and you don’t need 7 phds in italian cousine.
Edit: I also saw, in Angular, the infamous:
if (variable === true || variable === 'true' || variable === "true") {
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Technology@lemmy.world•Snapdragon X1 Elite Linux laptop cancelled due to performance concerns — Linux PC maker says Qualcomm CPU is ‘less suitable for Linux than expected’English
311·16 days agoTheir drivers are SHIT, for wifi there is CNSS, ICNSS, then QMI, all do the same thing, but differently, but NO, it’s the same thing, but what does this do??? Is this really a different event or is this just rewritten in that event? Idk still, no one knows.
Edit: I tried to port the not working kernel drivers for the wifi on the Redmi Note 9s to postmarketos (wifi is not working), didn’t work and it’s now on LineageOS
I tried KDE mobile (and a lot of other DEs) on postmarketos, seems everyone has the same experience, it drains the battery a lot faster than other phone DEs.
Yeah, the pin being only 6 digits is quite bad I liked the mobile version, but there are still some issues to iron out.
I like the vanilla gnome on my tablet, but smartphones are quite different. As for phosh, it seemed to be kinda buggy on my smartphone, I couldn’t lock it and it had some other problems. Linux on phones have some road ahead to be good, but we’re getting there. Maybe kde mobile might be better, but it sucks all the battery (idk why).
potatoguy@lemmy.eco.brto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Handled a ThinkPad today. What distro should I go with? Ubuntu? Arch?
4·23 days agoI use CachyOS on my X220 with btrfs and lzo as disk compression (lzo is very good on old cpus and makes the SSD go really fast). But I think any distro could be good on that hardware.
As a side note, I would really like an x86_64-v2 distro, people jumped from no additional instructions to v3 in no time, but these thinkpads and older pcs could really shine with that kind of optimization.




From what I understood, some soldiers took over the tv stations and said they were making a coup. The other parts of the army sent them to jail.