It's not built in, but I generally recommend Solid Explorer for that functionality: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=pl.solidexplorer2&hl=en_US&gl=US
It's not built in, but I generally recommend Solid Explorer for that functionality: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=pl.solidexplorer2&hl=en_US&gl=US
Reported here: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/RIDER-102338/Rider-Crashes-When-Clicking-Stop-Project-After-Debugging-in-Ubuntu-20.04
Thanks for the link and advice!
I think I'm going to take your advice on this. It's driving me insane and my attempted solution did not work.
Nope - I'm still having the issue. I'm going to follow the advice I received here to file an issue.
Alright, so I think I may have solved it. I reset Rider to its default settings, and it worked at least once. I'll try again later to confirm that was the fix.
Honestly, taking the time learn Docker and then learn more about the specific containers that you want to use is probably going to be the easiest way forward in your position. If you have any specific questions about Docker or the containers you're looking at, I can try to help.
When it comes to network mounts, I've found it a lot easier to use rclone for that purpose, and that's currently what I use for the backend of my Plex server.
Is it possible that connecting to WiFi triggers app updates in the background? Those can be somewhat intensive especially when batched.
Additionally, the Google Play Store no longer notifies when app updates occur, so this process is a little more opaque than it used to be.
Is that the official distribution link or a personal mirror?