Not sure but I think because water sticks to surfaces and pulls on other water molecules. I think this is what the capillary effect is based upon. Thus also (partly) how trees get their water upwards, and how sponges absorb water
Not sure but I think because water sticks to surfaces and pulls on other water molecules. I think this is what the capillary effect is based upon. Thus also (partly) how trees get their water upwards, and how sponges absorb water
you mean I should’ve called it the “dark web”? I just wanted to imply that “dark web” is a subset of “deep web” in the sense that it is not searchable by regular search engines, thereby including “dark web” to the “deep web” set. But regardless, leak dumps can be found in both places, right?
Not if you cross reference the IP with data leaks on the deep web, revealing way more or other personal info
It may be exactly this, noticed by Linus Tech Tips: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHKKcd3sx2c
If their solutions don’t work, try this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JoFi5yXzZk
You hate doing math?
If I touch furniture, I also need to touch it with my other hand at least once
Why is /mnt a “temporary” mounting point? I alwags put my permanent ones there. I’d say /media is temporary…
Sadly I don’t remember. Sometimes it comes preinstalled, sometimes not, depending on OS or something. (Maybe Manjaro gnome). I could copy and paste inside of vim, but not to/from outside vim.
So I need to dive into the manual to do something as basic and universal as “copy and paste”? Why not make it Ctrl+shift+c or have it shown in the info text when pressing this almost universally accepted keypairs? Or at least make it somewhat similar to this. I find it bonkers why some programs decide to just have radically different shortcuts or defaults, the complete opposite of what feels intuitive. Same with the design of some doors that need actual SIGNS on them to tell you which direction they open. Just bad design choice.
Edit: just remembered. Same story with tmux. Want to copy something? Surprise, it’s not anything you expect it to be. Some ctrl+b + [ or some shit
For vim I had to config or install something just to be able to COPY something to use outside vim, how backwards is that? Isn’t this the most standard feature one can expect to work as default?
Calling communities subs is fine. It need not necessarily refer to reddit. Sub means under/secondary/part of.
Depends on the person. If you’re happy living in wonderland, theism is the way to go
No unfortunately not… Would’ve been a real pain.
Hey that works too! Same effect as my previous workaround, that I just posted yesterday.
I do have to repeat this command everytime, so I had to put it into ~/.zshrc so it’s executed beforehand in every new terminal.
It still does feel lile a workaround since it ‘resets’ itself (as I said) with every new terminal.
I am not sure I “solved” this but when I add this to my startup script for my terminal (~/.zshrc):
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-agent-$USER-socket
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
it works then. I am not sure I’m still using the ssh agent, but at least it also does not cache my passphrase/private key
I am not sure I “solved” this but when I add this to my startup script for my terminal (~/.zshrc):
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-agent-$USER-socket
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
it works then. I am not sure I’m still using the ssh agent, but at least it also does not cache my passphrase.
I am not sure I “solved” this but when I add this to my startup script for my terminal (~/.zshrc):
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-agent-$USER-socket
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
it works then. I am not sure I’m still using the ssh agent, but at least it also does not cache my passphrase (or private key in ram)
I searched. When I change this variable (path), it works. So in the startup script for my terminal (~/.zshrc) I added this:
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-agent-$USER-socket
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
Now it works, but I’m not sure why. Anything BUT /run/user/1000/gcr/ssh
works I think
i no read qr