Yeah, I tried it with hyprland and COSMIC. I'm currently using KDE, but if I get enough energy to configure hyprland on NixOS, I'll switch to that. COSMIC wouldn't let me use Steam, so I had to switch back to KDE. Tiling on COSMIC was really nice, though.
thejevans
I run a DualUp as well. I love it
Stylix does change font colors on Firefox for me
That's a non-commercial license. It's not open-source, just source-available.
I use this Plano Rack System tackle box
Getting industry to cap the wells is a hard problem that is being solved, but more slowly than it should be. The problem is these wells were drilled and used when they were producing a lot by massive companies with lots of profits.
Then, when they were less profitable, they were sold to smaller companies with much tighter margins. Then those small companies can't continue to operate them without losing money and they don't have enough money to cap the wells, so they abandon them.
If we ask the smaller companies to cap the wells, they'll go bankrupt, stop buying wells, and disappear. I don't have a problem with this outcome necessarily, but it won't get the wells capped because the companies will go bankrupt instead of paying and it will consolidate all oil and gas power to the big companies (close to the current state of affairs, for sure, but this would basically be absolute).
Ideally the big companies that drilled and used the majority of the oil from the well would pay, but mergers and acquisitions can often make that difficult.
For now, states are working to require funds be set aside ahead of time to pay for future well caps and are working to pay to cap abandoned wells directly, which is expensive, but could come from increased industry fees and taxes.
These oil wells are available because they are not profitable, and often because they cost more to run than they could possibly produce.
Once HedgeDoc 2.0 comes out with the "Explore" page, I'm pretty sure that will take over for Obsidian for me. I have played around with all the fancy features in Obsidian, I just don't think I need the majority of them.
I just opened up Google Earth in Firefox to see what would happen. It's buttery smooth with basically zero lag on loading assets, and zero lag zooming and dragging around on my 240Hz display.
I have a 1gbps symmetric fiber connection and I'm running NixOS. my Firefox Nix Home Manager config is here:
that's unfortunate.
I use porkbun for my domains, cloudflare for dns, ddclient connecting to the cloudflare api for dynamic dns, and traefik as a reverse proxy to send subdomains to their respective service.
The only part I have to pay for is the porkbun domain.
$8 for a year is a good deal, but be ready to switch when that expires.