

It is a killer combo!


It is a killer combo!


I’m happily running an Intel NUC as TV computer since 2013, and it’s awesome for exactly the reasons you state. I invested in it when I realized how fully crap the “smart” features of my Samsung TV are. The ultimate controller for it is a combo keyboard and touchpad, I have the Logitech K400r.
The NUC is starting to show it’s age now with its 4th gen i5, and I’m in the process of replacing it with a mini PC with an Intel N100.
I think you can even make it a button in the title bar, like the minimize button. Or you should be able to bind a keyboard shortcut to it too.


Interesting use case. Sometimes you can find romanizations on lyricstranslate, but this is kinda hit and miss.


Hey, Swedish too!


Long time since I heard about anyone using CVS. I stopped using it 18 years ago when I discovered how much easier branches were to handle in SVN.
IMO an application written with a graphical toolkit and connected to a graphical server like X or Wayland shouldn’t be run as root, as these millions of lines of code that the program may use through libraries is a very large potential attack vector.
This should be done through the terminal if you value security.
You couldn’t have waited with posting this until Wednesday?
This gif is audible


Good, then you cost them more money in storage than they earn from hosting it.


If you’re on Linux, xscreensaver has a 3D version of the flying toaster screen saver!


You do you, but I think it’s rarely worth it having the absolutely newest version of something. The Debian version of a package may be older, but often has the advantage of being well-tested. And the Debian version of ncdu is all I’ve ever used and it has worked well.
uniget, huh? That’s not a package manager I’ve ever heard of before.


+1 for zram and earlyoom!


You can use baobab or ncdu to try to figure out what’s filling it up.
You should get some, they are rad