https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siDeIcGs3KY
Lindsay Lou and the Flatbellys - The River JordanRecorded live during the making of the record "Ionia"Filmed and multi-tracked by Beehive ProductionsCaptured...
https://youtu.be/J8bi03IJn2c
Монгол үндэсний бөхийн сүлд дуу. "Хийморь" төслийн дуу "Хийморь" Credits Produced by: @B.Zolboo. Batzolboo.B Music by: Temuujin.M /B production/ Lyrics by:...
https://youtu.be/csILUDfmtqM
“Hold Me Up (Thank You)” by Khruangbin from the upcoming album ‘A LA SALA', out now on Dead Oceans. Stream/Buy - ‘A LA SALA’: https://khruangbin.lnk.to/a-la-...
Looking for an article, video, podcast, etc that debunks the western propaganda
I've tried clearing all browsing data and it keeps giving me an error. It works fine on Firefox and the mobile version of Chrome.
I got an old Windows 7 laptop that was going to be thrown out and decided to put Linux on it (see previous thread here). Most people suggested I go with the latest stable version of Debian, so that's what I installed. I've mostly used Windows, but I do have some experience with Ubuntu.
The installation went smoothly, but I've had a few problems getting it set up to my liking:
flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://dl.flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo
I hit enter and nothing happens. No error message or anything. I restarted the computer but flatpak doesn't work, either through the software center or the flatpak website. I found a few forum posts with the same problem, but no solutions.
I somehow set it up so that my username is not the super user, so I have to type a password in the terminal every time I want to use sudo. Is there a way to fix this without a clean install?
I somehow set up the hard drive partitions so that the OS is on an encrypted partition, so I have to put in a password for the BIOS to boot up. Is there a way to fix this without a clean install?
I'm used to a desktop interface with a toolbar/start menu that I can pin frequently-used programs to, but with Debian it seems like I need to click "Activities" to do anything. Is there a way to set up the interface so it's more like Windows in that regard?
If I need to do a clean install, I'm thinking of switching to Ubuntu, since I'm more familiar with the interface. Is there any reason why I should stick with Debian? I've heard some people trashing Ubuntu but I'm not sure why. Is Debian better for older hardware?
Edit: Thanks for all the knowledgeable replies. I did a fresh install of Debian 12 (64 bit) with KDE and it seems to have resolved all my problems. Although it's a little slow and buggy, I've had to reboot it twice. I'll try a lightweight DE if that continues.
It messes with my ingrained muscle memory. So instead of upvoting a post I'll accidentally be reading a thread.
@Bobson_Dugnutt
@hexbear.net