It should come on all weather apps as a sort of health warning:
DONT FORGET TO LOOK OUT THE WINDOW
It should come on all weather apps as a sort of health warning:
DONT FORGET TO LOOK OUT THE WINDOW
I maintain that close to you geographically is better, so I use the services provided by my country’s metereological institute. They also provide human friendly data (much more than the web ui) as json or xml, and I scripted a little app around that. It’s not hard.


Nice, that looks pretty obvious.
In addition to the other reply, you should search around your distro* having problems with (certain) AMD gpus; maybe all you need is a backported kernel.
* I don’t think you ever mentioned. If it’s Ubuntu-based, search for Ubuntu.


Since you specifically mention qtile you should undo your customizations and see if that fixes your problem?
If not, you should look at the journal after reboot:
journalctl -b
But you’ll need to filter it.
Try journalctl -b | grep -v rtkit-daemon, which will remove the masses of entries you bemoaned in another comment (AFAICS all syslog entries should also be in the journal anyhow).
Very important:
Please make note of when the problem happened, and if your journal entries even go that far in time.


Great article, but you could’ve gone deeper into the modern ramifications. I feel you cut that short, just after mentioning the Zuckerborg - there would have been so much more to get into.
You should also have clarified that you’re talking about Linux as a consumer device OS; most of the internet and probably some social media giants run Linux or UNIX-like OSs, too.
And that Linux is not equivalent to FOSS, nor is the EFF.
And a link to that article you’re refering to.
but I like nano!
What about nano? Is it OK to choose a safe middle ground? I mean with ed I could just as well use butterflies.
BTW, notepad++ is popular on Windows. That’s the sort of software what gets hijacked.
Yr is Norwegian, but afaics they’re pretty good with nearby countries, too. It’s a product of their metreological institute, which seems like a good option privacy-wise. Not that such institutes have to be ad or data ming free, but they usually are.