- 57 Posts
- 16 Comments
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•Novelist Sean Michaels envisions what life will look like 125 years from nowEnglish
2·1 year agoCould you help me remember the theme of that episode? I’ve only watched Black Mirror once.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•How Americans View Data PrivacyEnglish
8·1 year agoThis is all rather meaningless because we don’t know the demographics of those who answered: 5,101 US adults of what generations?
18 or older selected at random from across the entire country, read this for more information about how they selected those adults.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•CreepJS - Creepy device and browser fingerprintingEnglish
9·1 year agoYeah, this is even creepier than coveryourtracks from EFF.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
commandline@programming.dev•How and why to use Lynx - the faster web browser
9·1 year agoCompletely agree. But if you know, then you did use it at some point right?
Use
lynxto browse a meme community is like closing your eyes while watching a movie, lol that’s my experience.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgto
Ask Experienced Devs@programming.dev•Users of Vim and similars, what exactly makes it useful compared to other text editors? How much time do you suppose you save when working with it?
2·1 year agoInstead of remembering what line number you were at, you can use marks (
:help mark-motions) to immediately jump back to where you left off.For example, type
mxto mark the current position withx(or anything you want). Say now you are at the top of the file, just type'xto go back to the line marked withx.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgto
Ask Experienced Devs@programming.dev•Users of Vim and similars, what exactly makes it useful compared to other text editors? How much time do you suppose you save when working with it?
4·1 year agoA godsend for saving time - the
ab(abbreviation) command. This command lets you shorten a long sequence of characters (be it a text or a complex command) into another sequence of any length. It works in both insert mode and command mode. If you frequently edit text using a lengthy command, this feature will significantly save you time. For example::ab ul s/\<./\u&/gto capitalize every word in a line. When you enter command mode (type:) and typeul, vim will automatically expand it tos/\<./\u&/gfor you.Additionally, the
mapcommand can save even more time, but IMO theabcommand offers more control for handling various cases. In my example, you can useulto only capitalize the lines that have a specific pattern using the global commandg.Another overlooked aspect is the
.exrcfile. Enabling it withset exrcin your config allows for different setups based on different situations. For instance, when writing notes, I prefer to have line breaks on to make the text look nicer on the screen. In contrast, when writing code, I don’t require this option. I simply need to placeset linebreakin the.exrcfile in the note-writing directory to adjust accordingly.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•How to Stare at Your Phone Without Losing Your SoulEnglish
21·1 year agoThat’s what I like about FOSS. You see very few distractions that try to grab your attention. This leads to a rather quiet digital life.
To take it a step further, you could enable the Do Not Disturb feature on your devices and only grant notification permissions to essential apps. This way, you can enjoy some peace of mind.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgto
linux4noobs@programming.dev•Is there a way to automatically clean my home directory of app-specific directories?
2·1 year agoI haven’t come across any information regarding the automatic aspect, and I don’t have any personal experience with
bubblejaileither. However,bubblejailis mentioned on the arch wiki. It might be the closest match in this case, so you could give it a try.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgto
linux4noobs@programming.dev•Is there a way to automatically clean my home directory of app-specific directories?
2·1 year agoYou can use bubblewrap (its CLI name is
bwrap) to make an arbitrary directory as$HOMEfor a specific program session. Basically, you can bind or set any environment variable you need for that particular program. I recommend checking out the arch wiki on this topic.For example:
bwrap --dev-bind / / --bind $HOME/your/dir/path $HOME <your_program>. This will let<your_program>have access to/and device permissions, with$HOME/your/dir/pathserving as its$HOME.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•AMD officially confirms no more Windows 10 chipset driver and support for the new Ryzen AI 300 seriesEnglish
17·2 years agoMy lazy ass decided to just go with the copied title generated by Lemmy when making the post. I edited the title, thanks for mentioning that!
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Publishers Sue Google over Pirate SitesEnglish
11·2 years agoArchive link: Publishers Sue Google over Pirate Sites
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgOPto
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Publishers Sue Google over Pirate SitesEnglish
6·2 years agoFixed.
Edit: The new link of the post works but I think providing an archive link would be more sufficient.
BodaciousMunchkin@links.hackliberty.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What's something you want to tell us lemmy users ?
53·2 years agoThis kind of self-fulfilling prophecy is what will drive down even more support for Linux. The thing we need to do right now is to let more people try out Linux so that corporations will see Linux as a potential target on the desktop and make products for Linux, not the opposite like what you are saying.























There’s an icon on the web interface, next to the star icon to save the post. It looks like a copy icon with two squares. I’m not sure how to do that on mobile, it may depend on the client you are using.