Thanks!
Thanks!
Thank you that worked, now that I understand how to use the combo. Still wished there was a way to set my own combo. But this works
I’ll give that a shot when I’m back at my laptop, thank you
[EDIT]: That didn’t work for me. Wish it did, since it’s a quicker combo! The CKEY + en dash * 3 did though
Ah, thank you! You helped me understand how that chart works
EDIT: Hey thank you, that worked for the immediate challenge — and now I have a use for the caps lock key
This is the type of thing to keep in your back pocket for days when you need perspective. Sure you messed up today. But did you Billy Coull your day?
At first I thought you were posting your response and it came off like this wonderful troll of what a user might disingenuously post on nostupidquestions
Vinyl Music Player has been my favorite of the large handful that I’ve tried
Your question about the security of apps is a good one and should be an ongoing one. Who do we, who don’t code, put our trust into? Generally I just see if an app is frequently mentioned by others; but that’s a pretty shaky approach to downloading software…
I appreciate the additional info. Since I want to make Linux primary (one of my two main points in this little project is getting familiar with Linux!), I’ll look into Luks for that partition
The db2 / vm suggestion is a little over my head, currently, but I’ll research that as well!
Honestly I’ve been away from Windows long enough that it just wasn’t a consideration while I was creating the partitions and then the dual boot. I just discovered that it’d happened when I went to access the shared partition in pop and was asked for the password.
I do want to retain a shared data partition between the two OS, however. Obvs the partition for the Window OS itself could remain encrypted, since that doesn’t affect pop os. And if it is best practice for system security.
I’ll read up that link to see what he has to recommend!
deleted by creator
Thank you! I think part of what I’m curious to hear input on is whether I should disable bitlocker for that shared data partition. Any thoughts? Is it a best practice to have it on?
In fairness to your point, this screenshot alerted me that reaper is on Linux which is nice to know. I use it sometimes and hadn’t yet thought to check
Team Bandcamp as well. I’ll be sad if it degrades. My hope is it survives long enough to be discovered by everyone as they get sick of the shit music streams on Spotify, Pandora and their ilk
Is this a good route to improve privacy in Windows
Huh. I was going to have an external HD for games with two partitions: a larger one for PC, formatted in ntfs, and a smaller one for Linux, for if I want to try gaming with it, and formatted in ext4. You’re suggesting that both should be in exfat, instead?
I appreciate the input, thank you. When you say live USB, is it one that contains the original data used to create the distro — like, e.g. what I’d download from Mint? Or do you mean to just copy the whole LInux partition (given that it’s small enough) onto a USB?
I looked into this little bit.
So on a 512gb hd an e.g. breakdown:
Windows 150gb
Linux / 30gb
Linux /home ? 70gb
Data (nfts format, shared with both os) 262gb (or whatever is actually left over)
(I’ll have an external HD for games)
I appreciate the tips, thank you. When you mention making a separate home partition in Linux: my understanding is that we unallocate hard drive space from Windows and, when we first install Linux, it will use that free space to make its own partition. Are you referring to another step, beyond that?
This is pretty interesting. Although this is a pretty thorough answer, is there somewhere that I can find more deets? Or is there a term for this approach that can launchpad further research?
Quite the meta statement of mainstream music