It absolutely is, but I couldn’t find an expanddong on Lemmy, whereas there is a sbubby
c/sbubby
⚪ It contains abusive or harmful content
⚪ It doesn’t belong in this community
🔘 I’m in this picture and I don’t like it
⚪ Other (specify)
Nah you just forgot the comma:
Those who can’t, extrapolate from incomplete data.
You can also use pv to see a nice progress bar:
pv path/to/awesome.iso > /dev/disk/usb-drive
Absolutely, I daily drive Mint and it’s one of my favorite things about it!
And when I installed Chromium from the command line as a deb, it OVERWROTE my wish, and installed Chromium as a snap too.
This right here is my issue with Ubuntu. A huge part of Linux for me is that I am in control of my OS and machine. If I use apt to install a package, it’s because I want the .deb version. I absolutely don’t need my OS telling me “I know what you asked for, but I’m going to give you the snap version anyway”.
I could see snaps being preferred over .debs in the Software app, sure (though they shouldn’t be the only option). But replacing apps in a command line tool is garbage.
Even the Steam Deck isn’t locked to their flavor, so I highly doubt a full pc would be.
gekkering
I’ve installed Mint on a 6 recently. Setting up the boot settings was a minor hassle, but everything else was very smooth. Definitely recommend the linux-surface kernel.
Was it Arch, btw?
There goes the planet…
Yes, I do! Thanks!
bs=1M
This part varies based on your hardware (my hardware is much faster with a value of 4096) , but other than that it’s everything.
Here is a handy script that can help determine which bs size is best for your hardware.
I have it running on a Libre Computer Renegade (kind of a big brother to Le Potato)
It works really well for me. Not sure about now, but when I set it up there wasn’t a way to get the actual Octoprint image to boot on it, so I used Octoprint Deploy.
Don’t let this man distract you from the fact that in 1998, KDE Plasma threw Gnome off Hell In A Cell, and plummeted 16 ft through an announcer’s table.
I personally like https://teachingtechyt.github.io/calibration.html for all of the above. It provides gcode and stl files based on your input. I’ve had great success using it for my Ender 3.
Thank you all for making my vision a reality!