@p_consti
@lemmy.worldYou can set the initial value directly in /etc/environment
, did you check that? It could also be set only for your user, so it might be in ~/.profile
, ~/.bashrc
or ~/.bash_profile` (or the rc file for your shell if you're not using the default bash).
Edit: I suppose you could also have added a startup script in /etc/init/
or /etc/init.d/
, or in /etc/rc.local
I use it for everything, because I connected my external monitors through the eGPU. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PRIME has a few methods for running only selected applications via the eGPU, but I haven't tried them. Edit: See also https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/External_GPU#Xorg for eGPU specific setups.
Can confirm, I'm using a dock (from Razor) daily without problems. Hot switching doesn't work though, you need to restart X/your display manager to connect or disconnect the eGPU. I'd recommend the gswitch utility to configure the graphics card to be used (on X11). Haven't tested much on Wayland, but I know that at least Gnome (Wayland only) has trouble mixing eGPU and the internal display if that is important.
Lemmy itself can hide read posts, so they app never even sees them; you can find this setting on your profile
Jerboa doesn't have anything to do with it, it is the app you use to access the fediverse/lemmy.
Lemmy has upvotes, downvotes and the tally of those two. Karma is a step further; on reddit, every user has a total tally (Karma) as well, where all up/downvotes of every comment and post are added together as a "score" for the user. So people post popular stuff to get upvotes and thus have a higher score (which some subreddits required to post).
Have a friend who still does this. Every so often he'll notice that something is missing from a previous reinstall and we have to take a second to bring his system back on track