Not until there hasn’t been any for a century. P.S. Best of luck.
I’d guess, with all the veterans living here, that the ‘near future’ isn’t so dangerous.
Me too. Especially more at home weatherwise that my old one. (Stayed too long … just becuz my ancestors made a mistake.)
When we humans are feeling powerless (usually, we’re right), we often do those things.
When we move somewhere else, for a while we’re relieved. Slowly we realize everywhere has problems.
Hmm. Sure, Vlad. Wait: how much will that pay, per child per month?
Good point. Messages sent, images taken, and ‘things happen’ in cars.
I think the last time I installed Mint (21.2) it DID create a swapfile. Don’t use it, so commented that out in /ETC/FSTAB.
When I started with Linux, I was happy to learn that I didn’t need a bunch of separate partitions, and have installed all-in-one (except for boot of course!) since. Whatever works fine for you (-and- is easiest) is the right way! (What you’re doing was once common practice, and serves just as well. No disadvantage in staying with the familiar.)
After I got up to 8GB memory, stopped using swap … easier on the hard drive -and- the SSD. (I move most data to the HD … including TimeShift … except what I use regularly.)
I use Mint as well; for me this keeps things as simple as possible. When I install a new OS version (always with the same XFCE DE) I do put THAT on a new partition (rather than try the upgrade route and risk damaging my daily driver) using the same UserName. A new Home is created within the install partition (does nothing but hold the User folder.)
To keep from having to reconfig -almost everthing- in the new OS all over again I evolved a system. First I verify that the new install boots properly, I then use a Live USB to copy the old User .config file (and the apps and their support folders I keep in user) to the new User folder. Saves hours of reconfiguring most things. The new up-to-date OS mostly resembles and works like the old one … without the upgrade risks.
And a LOT risky
even the best communication in the world isn’t enough to overcome the inertia of a fossil-fuel based system
Wrong. People’s sense of the reality of the situation can overcome that inertia … and that sense was carefully tended to by the communications of the oil and gas companies … and an economic system that has widely communicated for decades the idea that growth - based in unending consumption of resources - is the end-all and be-all. Their communication was the best in the world … for them, and to the detriment of all the rest of us.
Your mama.
Good move. I’d bet that the number of Morsers has seriously declined. If the 2.8k users stay away from the bottom 100K of the bands, that’s probably enough BW to handle the CW demand.
I prefer them; this afternoon I had bad luck with ALL Invidious and Piped servers. Maybe it was local. Working for me now.
For scientific research purposes, guaranteed to be a consistent ‘standard’. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esQyYGezS7c
Yeah! Did that once, many years back. took a couple weeks. Used a ripper program that went out on the net and got all the metadata, saved to a HD (now on the third one). Put the CDs in Logic cases (no-wear), recycled the jewelboxes.
Over time, started to drop album folders into VLC, save the playlists, at ur fingertips.