Not sure about studio quality, but for video conferencing and doing some Twitch streams, I’ve being using a Blue Yeti Nano USB microphone for a few years (since COVID) with no issues on Linux.
An alternative to making a shell script is to make an alias or a function instead. That way, it runs in your current shell session and you can access the history
command.
Additionally, you could always dump the output of the history command outside the shell script and then run the shell script on that file after you have dumped it.
I think the issue is that history
is a shell built-in and not an actual program (ie. external command) and it typically only works in an interactive shell session.
A workaround could be to access the $HISTFILE
directly:
{cat $HISTFILE | grep ...
Of course, you can use also just do:
{grep -e ... $HISTFILE | ...}
if you are opposed to the cat
at the beginning.
With all the recent fixes and features, Photon is now my default lemmy client :]
Thanks to @Xylight for starting this project and being so responsive on GitHub (I’m @pbui).
It’s unfortunate, but the reality is that many of the proprietary services are… free, convenient, and where the people are.
Most projects do not have a lot of funding, so it makes sense to use low cost platforms with the least amount of friction. I think most developers are aware of the risks and trade-offs, but make a pragmatic decision to use these proprietary services b/c the benefits for them outweigh the costs.
COSMIC is looking great! Do you have any comments about the state of the widgets and how those are working?
Pop is not using Wayland yet … the current GNOME based DE still uses Xorg. COSMIC, however, will use Wayland.
Yes, I’ve run into this issue recently. The /boot/efi
folder is actually its own partition, so removing packages from /
will not give your more space for the efi
partition. On my recentish Pop install, the /boot/efi
partition is about 512MB
which is just about enough space for two kernels but… not much else (they may have increased this to 1GB
for new installs).
The workaround I did was to simply delete one of the kernels in /boot/efi/EFI/Pop_OS-...
(the is some string of letters). In this folder you should have the following:
$ ls -l /boot/efi/EFI/Pop_OS-f2c685b9-a9c2-48f0-907b-ebe199e94a55
total 289256
-rwx------ 1 root root 167 Jul 12 15:24 cmdline
-rwx------ 1 root root 134046998 Jul 12 15:24 initrd.img
-rwx------ 1 root root 134449391 Jul 12 15:24 initrd.img-previous
-rwx------ 1 root root 13844192 Jul 12 15:24 vmlinuz.efi
-rwx------ 1 root root 13846496 Jul 12 15:24 vmlinuz-previous.efi
As you can see, Pop stores the current kernel (vmlinuz) and ramdisk (initrd) along with the corresponding previous versions in case you need/want to revert back to the previous kernel. To free up some space, you can simply delete either the initrd.img-previous
or vmlinuz-previous.efi
file if you are not using the previous kernel. That should allow you to then download the firmware and update it.
After the firmware update, if you want to restore the previous (backup) kernel, you can copy it from /boot
back to the efi
folder above. Otherwise, the next kernel update will replace it for you anyways.
I hope this helps, good luck.
According to @soller@lemmy.world, they are still evaluating different CPUs… it’s just that Intel provides information publically and so they can release it under the GPLv3 right now:
My friend has deployed Phorge for himself and appears to be happy with it.