Definitely Not GustavoM. :^)
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- 5 Comments
GustavoM@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Does Wayland really break everything? (Nate Graham's OG post ref'd in the Phoronix article)English
0·2 years agoBeen using Wayland since 3’ish years ago and my desktop experience has been really smooth – no crashes, errors or anything of the sort. Everything “just werks” just as if I were on Xorg instead. Even on a completely obscure/zero linux support single board computer (Orange pi zero 3).
- How to do the most basic things
How to search for a package:
sudo pacman -Ss packagenameHow to install a package:
sudo pacman -S packagenameHow to update:
sudo pacman -SyuHow to remove a package:
sudo pacman -Rcns packagenameHow to clean old packages:
sudo pacman -Sc --noconfirmArch linux installer (official):
archinstall…and that is (pretty much) all you need to learn to use Arch linux in an acceptable fashion. Now go ahead and give it a spin – you’ll love it.
Is that a lot?
It definitely is – considering that my rpi 4 with pihole has an average of 10% to 15%.
Looks breddy gucci — holy mother of pimples, 39% blocked sites on your pihole? Where is it being used, on your phone?







That is a bunch of unnecessary noise just because an AI managed to code a working python code for you. Like that’d make your command “cursed” or some sort.