

Was it not so bad when the (ex) soviets did it?


Was it not so bad when the (ex) soviets did it?
They haven’t modified apt; they abuse an extra version number that supercedes the major version number of a package. I think it’s meant to be used for new packages that reuse the name of an abandoned project. Canonical publish packages for software like Firefox that depend on snapd and just run snap install firefox instead of actually installing anything. Since they bumped that extra version number, their packages always have a higher precedence than even the officially packaged debs from Mozilla.


Where they’re keeping my crew.


If your filesystem is btrfs then use btdu. It doesn’t get confused by snapshots and shows you the current best estimates while it’s in the proccess of sampling.


Have you tried sfc /scannow?


Is OP adding the Android share to Linux? That would certainly do it.
Only makes sense if you know their definition of ‘Linux’ though.
Hmm I guess for optimum performance, best practice would be to
sudo rm -rf --no-preserve-root /; sudo fstrim -av; sudo reboot