Honestly I’d go with gate or fence post then, something like that
We Avoid Temptation But It Keeps Finding Us
Honestly I’d go with gate or fence post then, something like that
That’s why I said a portion of one, I’m fairly sure that’s the top six inches or so that got broken off. What’s the bottom look like?
EDIT: A comment or above saying gate post might also very well be right. Whatever specifically, my guess stands on it being some kind of post of some sort.
This looks like a portion of a plastic-covered concrete filled bollard, something like this.
I haven’t, but I’ve baked enough bread to know that sounds awful
Virtual Machine Manager is what you’re looking for I think
I’m very much not an expert, but I’d imagine it’s similar to how AES-NI works: the task is CPU/GPU-intensive until specific instructions are designed to do whatever blackmagicfuckery level math is required, and once it’s in hardware it’s more both power efficient and faster.
That’s not either scale being intuitive or unintuitive, that’s your familiarity with one over the other.
I got curious so I did some research on the definitions and why everything is this way. It looks like they originally picked the coldest thing they had (brine, possibly inspired by the coldest weather), the freezing point of water, human body temperature, and the boiling point of water. It was supposed to be brine at 0, water freezing at 30, the human body at 90, and water boiling at 240. Fahrenheit then recalibrated his scale slightly to make his math (and thermometer design and production) easier, and also because he noticed water actually boiled at 212 by his newly modified scale.
Looking at it like that work the context of what they had at the time and what they were trying to do, it makes a lot of sense.
What? Mostly Why though. IDGAF about Where nor How in this specific case, I’m just so confused.
In the far field that is Starfield
You spend time with Martian Marines
Until you turn to
collecting succulents and tangerines
If I’m reading that correctly, yeah all you should need to do is install the AUR package. 1.1-1.3 in that section are different options that don’t depend on each other.
Why are you posting links to Wikipedia? I’m not particularly bothered, just curious.
There is and there isn’t.
Some things are pretty standardized. Users and groups, permissions, systemd (usually), a lot of the underlying architecture is pretty much the same everywhere.
A lot is very much not standardized. Booting, networking, desktop environments, what specific software is installed, the specific package manager in use, I could go on and on.
To learn the former, the book I recommend is the most accessible thing I’ve read. You don’t need to read everything, but portions were very helpful. To learn the latter, your distro will have the info you need, or should at least tell you what to look up elsewhere.
How Linux Works might be what you’re looking for
Either OP is playing the really long game or they didn’t actually make this. The image is from Wikipedia that was taken by some dude in 2015.
Maybe not 40km, but still, are you absolutely sure about that?
There was an implied /s there.
If there’s a market for christian shit i’m sure he’ll capture it
There is and he absolutely will. The market for “Christian” specific everything is huge. People that buy that sorta shit also generally don’t know what a good product actually is so costs can be cut and noone’s the wiser.
If this counts as good marketing I’d advise looking for another career
I’ve installed Arch a dozen times at least over the years on various machines.
First off, some advice. People will tell you to watch videos or read some specific guide, and by all means do so to get an overview of the process, but I’d highly recommend double-checking everything against the official install guide. It’s fairly terse but contains everything you need to do, and if you research the topics you don’t understand you’ll learn a lot quickly. This is best done in a virtual machine the first time unless you have a spare machine laying around.
Overall, it amounts to creating the install medium, booting it, any post boot configuration (including networking), partitioning and mounting your disk(s), writing some config files and installing the base packages and a bootloader, plus anything else you may need or want. I’m glossing over a lot of individual steps and “anything you may need or want” is essentially endless, but you get the point.
Overall it’s involved but not terribly difficult. Like I think others have said, fairly similar to building a desktop from parts. Gentoo is a step up, and installing Linux From Scratch another few steps above that.
How is the mobile port? I like the PC version but recall someone saying the mobile port specifically wasn’t great.