Hell yeah been using gnome tweaks for this
Extrasvhx9he
Yup Veracrypt is great even has a portable version that can be kept on the drive (might still need admin privileges though) so you won't have to install it on the system iirc . Would also go with cryptomator if you plan on using it with mobile systems but it has a one time payment for mobile.
Dang I'm interested too. I opted to just stick on a highly reflective sticker which works for me but interested to see what others have in mind
Oh that's fair still recommend it for its price though and don't even get me started on liquid fueled lighters lmao. Don't get me wrong I'm sure peanut lighters are OK so are zippos in the winter but dang if the area you live at gets any heat whatsoever it just evaporates after a while regardless of gaskets and whatnot (mostly via the wick). Such a frustration when you need it. I switched out my daily zippo for the butane insert for that exact reason and been loving it
Ever thought about switching out the bic for like a clipper or something so you can refill it or is it too big? Like the carry though looks great!
Joe dirt and Mr. deeds
Awesome thank you so much for the information I'll shop around to see if I can get a deal on just the exam locally
Thank you for the insight I'll check it out
Not really related to the post but how was the process of getting them off the internet? The cheapest price I can get would run me around 200USD for the whole deal: eye exam, new lenses and the specific frames I want. Hell if I can save money though I'm willing to try online
Oooo this is so exciting
I usually just export my bookmarks as a HTML file and use that on desktop. On mobile I just make a ods spreadsheet after copying all of my bookmarks manually (select all, share, copy to clipboard etc...)
Kinda don't think you can its one of the beauties of Linux, there's so many different flavors of it. Best thing that would've helped me as a beginner would've been like a collection of all the wiki's and basic knowledge in a single space instead of searching through different sites for a problem or terminal commands, which I bet exists but I just never looked too hard. Also documentation of common problems would've been big for me (especially for older devices) like drivers no longer being supported by kernels and solutions like using the open source version instead.