I edited my config, and it changed the font size next time I opened kitty. I’m not sure what is happening to you, other than maybe having the config file not where it’s expected.
I edited my config, and it changed the font size next time I opened kitty. I’m not sure what is happening to you, other than maybe having the config file not where it’s expected.
Did you remove the #
at the start of the font_size
setting?
I’m sure you’ve seen it many times, but I love Bill Hick’s take on marketing.
Well that sure sounds like a bunch of marketing gobbledygook.
Become comfortable with the command line. Learn the when and whys of using sudo
. If you aren’t willing to do that, you may not want to stick with Linux. It can have a little bit of a learning curve in the beginning (nothing like what it used to be), but you should get more comfortable in a short time.
I sinned. As always.
AI leading us cavemen into the future.
The only one I ever used was https://ltsp.org/ , but it’s been years, so I have no idea how it’s doing now. It was great for thin clients.
It’s been some time since I used it on an old laptop, but Puppy Linux was very responsive on shit hardware.
I don’t think you’ll get anything that is a real drop in for Partiful.
Try it out. It’s free. Install it on a PC or phone, set up a shared folder. Put something in it. Set up syncthing on another phone/computer and use the same folder name. The program takes care of all the network stuff.
There really isn’t any “hosting” with Syncthing. Everyone sharing the folder is kind of hosting.
When I have to. Either when Wayland does something that I can’t do with X11, or X stops being supported.
It’s also great for sharing files with friends/family. I gave a couple of friends a folder address, and we all just drop shit in there that we want the others to see.
Gilles Castel (RIP) published a couple articles on taking math notes with Vim + LaTeX which I found eye-opening. In another article he posted about how he integrates Inkscape into the process. If you haven’t read the articles, they may be helpful for what you are doing.
I just stick with one because I’m boring. I’ve used it for a long time, it works, I haven’t really changed anything in years. I think it’s pretty cool to talk with people who are polydistroamorous though.
I remember first using Vim a good 25+ years ago at this point. I hated it. Then I learned it. Now everything else just feels like shit.
That said, try a bunch of different editors and see which one you like most. Try micro
(you can probably just install it from your package manager), it might make you happy with your old Windows muscle memory.
I would just background the while loop, and then launch your ootaboogah.
I tried FreeBSD for several months about 15-20 years ago. I really liked how clean the filesystem and environment felt, and have suggested it for many people over the years. In the end I couldn’t get around their license vs GPL.