🧟‍♂️ Cadaver

Here for the lolz

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 6th, 2023

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  • It’s not clear… Do you want a portable USB drive ? If that’s the case it’s easily doable with Arch or Fedora.

    If you want a portable USB that you can modify AND flash then… It’s a little more complicated. You can always make a bootable Arch USB then rsync in any existing drive but it seems a little complicated.

    What you might want to do is create a simple install script. You can pretty much do it for any distro. It will consume more bandwidth than copying/writing an existing distro but will prevent MANY errors.

    With Arch it’s quite simple. I believe it might be as simple with Debian or any other distro.








  • Chemistry, and science in a broader sense. When you hear ‘woah a new medicine has been found that could cure cancer’ it’s most likely 'we have developed a new gadolinium based compound that has shown efficiency in penetrating cancer cells and could be used to deliver drugs to these areas, however it has not been tested in humans because it kills rats faster that it cures cancer"

    Almost every science headline was written by someone who never understood science. They just translate some foreign language into words that suits them.


  • I’ll add to what was said by others, but about [I] and [No]

    When building there is a cache. Sometimes you remove make dependencies, which removes the program but keeps a copy in cache. (There are other ways to remove a program and still keep it in cache)

    [I] means it will clen build all installed packages and use the cache for those that are not installed but were present.

    [No] means it will leave installed packages untouched but will rebuild those that are in cache before reinstalling them.

    Hope that solves it. And as said before - in 99.99% cases None is good enough.


  • That’s the thing ! It’s not linux specific.

    How it works :

    USB 1 and 2 use a set of 4 pins. It can only use those 4pins to transmit data.

    USB 3 uses 9 pins : the 4 original pins and 5 more pins. It is backwards compatible with USB 1 and 2 because it can only use those four pins instead of the full array.

    USB-C, however, uses 24 pins (2*12 pins to be exact). However, what makes no sense, is when using a USB-A to USB-C cable it does work only in one direction : from USB-A to USB-C.

    But rest assured, you are not alone onnthis issue. I’ve had it, even when I did not want to tranfer data but just power : it does not work, whether on Windows or Linux…