Man i didn't know the Thunderbird logo turned into reverse Firefox
I like art and game design, but other stuff is cool too.
Man i didn't know the Thunderbird logo turned into reverse Firefox
All of my other devices are either Windows or Android for convenience. The VPN works on Windows, but I can't isolate this issue via that route as those devices are old and have their own issues.
I have tried running my system without vpn and this specific issue hasn't appeared from yesterday until now. It is making me feel a little uncomfortable not having it on though.
I'm going to try another suggestion, then I'll come back to this one if it still doesn't work.
Unfortunately, the wifi password issue still occurs, but at least it is even less frequent than before (>1 day between password requests).
I restarted my system. All of my configurations should be equivalent to those in the wiki. I'll reply again if the issue still occurs in a few days.
I do indeed have plasma-meta.
The issue still occurs, but not nearly as often as it did before.
Apparently I had uninstalled the kwallet manager. I'll change the password and see if my problem still occurs.
Do you know how I would do that when I cannot access kwallet from the settings?
The password for kwallet is different bc I thought I might have ended up using it to manage money. I did not.
I have checked for for anything to do with kwallet in settings and searched for it with kwin. Kwallet doesn't exist in either of those for me, only at system restart.
I have noticed other people with kwallet issues, but that only affects me when I restart my system (asks for password). Other than that, I can't find a way to edit or disable kwallet without installing a 2-star app on the KDE Discover store that might not work and is reviewed as extremely annoying.
How do you know when to update an AppImage? I would use the Krita AppImage but I would have to hunt down the file in my file manager to open it and I can't find a way to update it without straight up replacing the thing manually.
It benefits both devs and end users.
Many people don't have the time or resources to manage a broken application especially devs who have to deal with that on several Linux distributions simultaneously.
Many distros use different package install scripts and repos to suit their specific needs. If I were to use a Debian-based distro, I would need to use apt to grab from a Debian-compatible repo. If I somehow got apt to work on Fedora, then not only would the program I installed not work, it would likely annihilate many of the preexisting dependencies and possibly brick the system.
I personally use Arch Linux which uses pacman, my package manager of choice, and a lot of times I'll find an application that doesn't work on my system due to mismatched dependencies. Arch is incompatible with .deb and .rpm files and does not use the Debian repo and its derivatives. It uses the AUR and its own derivatives of that repo. I don't have the time or skill to get a program to work with a newly updated dependency on one distro nevermind however many exist on the internet. Many devs do that for free after they've been working at their job for hours and/or taking college courses.
What a Flatpak or appimage (ignoring goofy aah snaps) really does is allow a developer to update dependencies for their application at their own pace without having to play catchup when something inevitably breaks due to an update. It allows for a more stable system. As a Debian Bro, you might not need that, but on rolling-release distros like Arch and funky distros like Manjaro that can be very much welcome.
I pirate old stuff and overpriced stuff permanently. I refuse to pay an ebay seller $200 for an old GameCube game and I refuse to pay $700 dollars for all the Sims 4 dlc. You may also catch me pirating movies and shows as I strongly dislike subscription models.
I usually have lucid dreams in the third person where I'm not a character in the story. I instead control the other characters like in a video game and I can save scum to get a particularly hard to achieve outcome. Usually, I like to let events pan out by themselves though, as that leads to the most interesting results.
TheRussianBadger - gaming with good humor and editing
Max0r - gaming with good humor, voice acting, and insane editing
Scott the Woz - for that old YouTube feel
RTGame - funny Irish gaming man
Call Me Kevin - funny Irish gaming man
Indeimaus - mostly horror and Metroidvania gaming
Game Apologist - good Sonic content
RadKing - Fallout content
Iron Pineapple - From Software enthusiast
MuYe - BeamNG content
The Orpheon - good Metroid content
Louis Rossman - disgruntled business tech repair man
Gamers Nexus - pc tech review
Linus Tech Tips (and its other channels) - LMG has been making some very good changes since their first response to their recent controversies. If they actually deliver with them, then all of these channels should be good to watch. Mac Address should be fine to watch as it has been stated that the channel and group affiliated are kept somewhat separated from the rest of LMG for various reasons.
Hardware Unboxed - Australian pc tech review
Monitors Unboxed - Hardware Unboxed for Monitors
Dave's Garage - cool Windows tricks from the guy who made the Task Manager
The Cherno - good Australian C++ channel
Nicco Loves Linux - good KDE and GNOME stuff
The Linux Experiment - Linux and open source news
unfa🇺🇦 - open source audio solutions
Mental Outlaw - the libre man
Royal Skies - free and open 2d and 3d content and assets
TerminalMontage - great animations
Noodle - great story animator
The Slow Mo Guys - slow motion videos of pretty cool stuff
Hacksmith Industries - cool Sci-Fi irl building channel
Shadiversity - medieval weapon and armour experimentation
ElectroBOOM - shocking experiments
Major Hardware - 3d printing and fan design showdown
Donut - good car content
SilvaGunner - wacky game music
Eurobeat Gems - great if you like Eurobeat music
Audio University - how your sound system works
Kyle Hill - science with nerd Thor
LockPickingLawyer - you will never look at locks the same way
No Text To Speech - cool for Discord users
Fact Fiend - miscellaneous facts and British banter
Bosnian Ape Society - If you've seen Nvidia Bread, then you'll understand.
High Boi - movie summaries
There's more that I could # recommend, but I couldn't figure out how to describe them.
I kinda wanna try Gentoo just for the experience, but as someone who already uses Arch, I'm worried it will take up more of my time than my current setup already does.