Oh shoot.
Any other instance that’s closer?
Oh shoot.
Any other instance that’s closer?
Oooooohhhhhhh!!!
THAT’S why so many people say that root beer tastes like toothpaste!
We’ll see. I’ve been about to work around it so far, but I might get fed up if I get into more problems and finally do it.
Right? I think that’s when the US will eventually say stop.
But who knows.
Then they’ll do Syria, then Egypt with the Muslim brotherhood, then they’ll attack Iraq, then they’ll attack Saudi Arabia, and it’ll continue on and on like this.
Create an account on a local server?
That could get you in worse trouble than just getting fired.
Thanks! I’m just trying to help.
Step 4 is when you become the senior engineer, show up to work in sweatpants and a dirty t-shirt with Crocs, and don’t go to meetings anymore unless it’s about major architectural decisions, and they can’t fire you because you’ve become an oracle of the company software.
Should. But didn’t. Until fairly recently.
C’mon man. Lighten up. This is also a Linux community. And as far as I know, Linux gamers also use browsers for game-related tasks.
1 minute in, the video stops and requests that we log in…
I get what you mean. But I posted this for anyone who still wants to remain on an Ubuntu based distro and are facing problems with the Firefox Snap.
And honestly, the same problems are occurring with the Flatpak version as well because of how the sandboxing breaks certain extensions.
Yes, it uses an immutable atomic distro. I don’t know about Android phones, but I wouldn’t be surprised.
Huh? This article gives instructions how to replace your Firefox SNAP package with a DEB package instead. Isn’t that what people want?
(correct me if I’m wrong, I’m also new at this)
There are two partitions. One with the current system, one with the previous system. Updates are applied in a whole batch at once, once in a while.
Current system is cloned into the old one and an update is applied to the clone.
Once the update is complete, system reboots in the clone, and what was the current system becomes the previous one.
If something goes bad, you can reboot into the previous system and fix the clone.
Yeah I guess that will have to do. I’ll go read the docs and see how to set it up.
Yeah that’s probably what I’m going to have to end up using.
Why use a container though? Why not install it directly?
Yes, and this is especially true from people coming from outside of North America.