It's weird how the templates folder is so rarely used. Even on Gnome, where basic things like creating a .txt is not there (only new folder), "new user friendly" distros like Ubuntu don't add them as templates.
There's still OpenGL backends, a newer one that shares the same backend as the Vulkan renderer and the old OpenGL renderer.
I’m using Silverblue and it also symlinks to /var/mnt. I don’t think it does that on traditional distros, like Fedora 40 Workstation.
Not aware of any correct pictures, but I can tell you what's wrong with this one
I would also like the mention that the FHS standard wasn't designed to be elegant, well thought out system. It mainly documents how the filesystem has been traditionally laid out. I forget which folder(s), but once a new folder has been made just because the main hard drive in a developer's system filled up so they created a new folder named something different on a secondary hard drive.
I don’t get why this sort of picture always gets posted and upvoted when it’s wrong for most distros nowadays.
My drive was brand new when the issue started. I don’t think SMART showed anything wrong with it, apart maybe from the improper shutdowns count.
Not sure if it was Linux only, I never had Windows installed on that drive.
There's nothing technical stopping Google from sending the prompt text (and maybe generated results) back to their servers. Only political/social backlash for worsened privacy.
I experienced that failed run shutdown binary a lot, the issue was that the OS I installed the drive on was defective. In use, the entire filesystem would become read only, the OS would freak out, and shutting down would fail with that message.
Are the default policies good though? There's some collaboration between Fedora and Tumbleweed for SELinux policies, I imagine even more now since Tumbleweed plans to move to SELinux in the near future and derivatives like Aeon are already using SELinux.
@that_leaflet
@lemmy.world