

Maybe the wiki has some useful information: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Linux_console#Fonts
Linux enthusiast, family man and nerd


Maybe the wiki has some useful information: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Linux_console#Fonts


i just noticed that the “make text bigger” shortcut that works for my mac terminal didn’t work with arch
That’s because in MacOS it’s a terminal emulator, a GUI application with a CLI inside.
In Arch, if you didn’t install a desktop environment, the terminal is the raw TTY, not an emulator, so it does not have reszing/zoom options.
But as @anon5621@lemmy.ml mentioned, you can set the font of the TTY to a bigger font using the setfont command.


Good point. Yes. Small breakage means it’s easier to fix. Although, the years I’ve run my rolling release system, I’ve had it break maybe one of two times. Easily fixed. Both of those was because there was a change that needed a manual intervention, which I did not read about until after, so those were my own fault.


I use a rolling release for mainly 3 reasons.


Very Nice and very clean interface!
Good job!


I’ve read that Qnap is often using ZFS as the storage filesystem. If your bazzite does not have the tools installed to work with that, then it will probably show as unallocated or unknown.


Sure, but until their DNS records update, the server is unreachable at the domain address.


As someone else mentioned, this does not seem to be an issue with the DynDNS itself. But rather the fact that your ISP changes your IP regularly (DHCP, non-static IP). I would really recommend you get a static IP from your ISP. DNS lookups should never fail after that.


Display managers handles sessions. A “desktop” is a session and if none are started yet, how can it display it?
Lockscreen and display managers are two different things. They are not the same and does not have the same functionality.


The reason this might work is that some shells, like zsh, interpretes the questionmark in the URL as a function of some sort, making the URL invalid to yt-dlp.


Ghost needs emails for a couple of reasons.
(Required) Ghost does not do user passwords. They use magtic links, which they send out via email when signing in. It’s just how they have chosen to do it. You can ask them why they don’t want to save passwords.
(Optional) Ghost has a newsletter function. If you enable it, you need to setup a bulk email service, like Mailgun. Even regular SMTP won’t really work there. It can send out a newsletter everytime a blog post is published, so the members will get notified.
I recently had to do this email dance with a Ghost instance setup, where most of the email ports are blocked on the network. I know how you feel. I also wanted to just use passwords, but not currently possible with Ghost.
Other services might do the same as Ghost. I do host many services, that does not require email setup though.


That’s true. I just assume when calender is involved it’s for multiple users. :P


Only free for one user though, even “self-hosted”.


self hosted are the first 2 words in the question…


One of the best ways to reduce power consumption on older laptops is to change the HDD to an SDD.
But don’t expect to get below 10W on an old laptop.


Isn’t the gtk version of the xdg-portal suppose to do this?
(I don’t use gtk, so I’m not sure)


At least Framework disclosed this issue and are pushing out fixes.


Seems most of these Wintel boxes are Intel Celeron/Atom based, so it should be able to run just about any Linux OS.
Or, if it’s not just a faulty file, but a faulty firmware release, don’t update to this version.
Joke answer: get the IINA devs to release a Linux build.
More seriously: MPV is pretty close and might even be able to be configured to what you want. But seriously though. Sounds like you need/want exactly this UI, so you should ask the IINA devs to make a Linux build.