I dunno, I once combined two languages in the context and it started to give me a bunch of python code. Was scary.
I dunno, I once combined two languages in the context and it started to give me a bunch of python code. Was scary.
It was a joke
Narrator: Of course, it wasn’t.
Some might say reddit is no longer fun
did you use Reddit before?
did you stop using Reddit?
Well, Telegram uses 690 MiB on my system and Thunderbird uses 1.1 GiB.
Just for reference
~> compsize -x /
Processed 699693 files, 766975 regular extents (791577 refs), 360356 inline.
Type Perc Disk Usage Uncompressed Referenced
TOTAL 57% 39G 68G 69G
none 100% 23G 23G 23G
zstd 35% 15G 44G 45G
prealloc 100% 69M 69M 104M
~> compsize -x /var/lib/flatpak
Processed 340412 files, 115619 regular extents (256345 refs), 209687 inline.
Type Perc Disk Usage Uncompressed Referenced
TOTAL 55% 6.7G 12G 24G
none 100% 3.6G 3.6G 6.6G
zstd 36% 3.1G 8.5G 18G
~> compsize -x /home/user/.local/share/Steam
Processed 219633 files, 1097250 regular extents (1111566 refs), 57457 inline.
Type Perc Disk Usage Uncompressed Referenced
TOTAL 84% 249G 295G 296G
none 100% 203G 203G 203G
zstd 50% 46G 91G 92G
prealloc 100% 36M 36M 36M
~> compsize -x /home/user/.local/share/bottles
Processed 18582 files, 33406 regular extents (33406 refs), 2366 inline.
Type Perc Disk Usage Uncompressed Referenced
TOTAL 53% 1.8G 3.3G 3.3G
none 100% 959M 959M 959M
zstd 36% 907M 2.4G 2.4G
So it’s 29G(43%) from / + /home, 5.3G(45%) from flatpak packages, 46G(16%) from Steam, 1.5G(47%) from Bottles, ~82G total out of 380G(22%) which is nice
I find btrfs pretty good for desktop use mostly due to convenience it offers with managing devices(adding new device or migrating data is trivial and does not need any downtime) and subvolumes(different mount options or excluding some data from snapshots).
It’s not. It’s a fork of FreeBSD.
To be fair you’ll be hearing “soon” after as well.
252 * 5 sec = 1260 sec or 21 min. I wonder what 254 does…
Lemmy kinda belongs to its users now.
Not until its users actually start developing Lemmy the software.
Your password is seven asterisks, right?