Why is the default value 176? I initially thought it might have to do with not allowing anything particularly impactful but the 8th bit (0x80) is set which allows to shut down. Why not just allow everything listed here?
Exhibit A.
Dualbooting windows and ubuntu (ubuntu is mostly working) and as in the picture, grub shows up in the boot order list as a bunch of gibberish.
Why is this? Could it hint at something wrong? How can I fix it even if just to make it look nicer?
I did have to restart the installation a bunch. Including once because it failed to create the partition, but the installation completed once that was done.
EDIT: I reinstalled grub and this persists so Im still curious.
Its happened to me. I just delete and repost which makes it work, which seems to mean it shouldnt take that long at all.
You should try installing vim ("Vi IMproved") and run the vimtutor
program it comes with, it walks you through the basics. Vim is addictive.
I agree that was inappropriate, but it won't work, on newer versions you have to pass --no-preserve-root
to rm if you want to delete /
Might be referring to philosopher Judith Butler's "gender performativity." Guessing by the similar name, I don't know what it actually means.
It is out, the repository is linked in the article. Has installation instructions and a demo app too.
Sadly I dont know when it was added or if it can be turned off, Im not very familiar with it.
Lemmy-ui uses isomorphic rendering so comments do come loaded (just not all of them) on the first page you visit, no javascript needed. Did you mean it should serve all comments?
There is a single hard disk but my computer comes with Intel optane, which seems to need RST. It has worked fine so far, maybe because of it not being multiple actual disks.
The Ubuntu guide (https://help.ubuntu.com/rst ) and comments on stackexchange claim its possible, maybe it wasnt in the past. It hasnt worked for me, Ive given up and am going to reinstall windows like you suggested.
Of those I subscribe to, a few I don't miss reading:
- https://www.the-syllabus.com/ - A curated selection of articles and videos. Broad, it covers politics, tech, etc through careful journalism, papers and talks.
- https://www.aisnakeoil.com/ - Commentary and chapters from a forthcoming textbook. Tired of all the lazy hype so this is nice to read. By Arvind Narayanan (the PL researcher) and an AI PhD student.
- https://www.carbonbrief.org/ - Weekly summary of climate stuff, something important but Im too lazy to properly follow news.
Hello, I'm trying to install ubuntu alongside windows 10 which I need for school.
I've tried two methods to get windows to use AHCI: 1) switch to safe mode, choose AHCI in the BIOS, log on to windows then turn safe mode off. 2) use the registry editor to get the AHCI drivers on, then choose AHCI in the BIOS.
In both cases windows fails to startup and thinks the hard disk is messed up. Are there any alternative methods? Anything I couldve gotten wrong? Unable to find leads so far.
I will next be trying to update some drivers, maybe that will work, but would love some guidance until I get back to trying.
EDIT: I wasn't able to figure out how to get my existing windows installation to work with AHCI. I also wasnt able to use a windows live usb to fix my isntallation. I had two partitions and ended up installing windows on the partition I had freed up for ubuntu, moving my files to it, then installing ubuntu on the partition windows initially was on.
I have no idea whats wrong with my computer because that wasnt all the trouble I faced lol, but now am happy I have ubuntu working.