If it’s not showing up in lsusb and there is no activity in syslog when connecting or disconnecting it, then the problem is not a driver. It’s likely a bad cable or you got a dead module.
If it’s not showing up in lsusb and there is no activity in syslog when connecting or disconnecting it, then the problem is not a driver. It’s likely a bad cable or you got a dead module.
Why are you trying to install a driver for a CH340? The driver is already built into the kernel. Just plug it in and it will work.
Boeing could supply virtual floppy drives that take USB drives or SD cards if they wanted to. I’m sure they don’t want to spend the money getting one certified until they are forced to though.
Floppy disks will continue working fine until the supply of new old stock disks runs out or becomes unreliable.
I swapped the boot drive from a 1st gen i7 machine to a threadripper machine and it worked without any issues. I was using the default kernel on Linux Mint.
If you have any temperature monitoring or custom fan control stuff, you will need to reconfigure it though.
The real reason is that ULA and BO know they can’t compete, so they are doing everything they can to slow Starship down.
Anything I add to fstab gets mounted in /mnt
and removable drives get auto mounted to /media
. Linux doesn’t care where you mount your drives, they can be mounted anywhere you want.
I put /var/lib/flatpak
in a separate btrfs subvolume. Timeshift only takes a snapshot of the root and home subvolumes.
I use it all the time without any VPN and haven’t had any issues. I watch almost all youtube videos in MPV, which uses yt-dlp to get the video. I download any video I may want to watch again later to my server.
I always use yt-dlp do download youtube videos. It doesn’t require installation, you just download and run it.
By the late 90’s most monitors were smart enough to detect when sync speed was too far off and not try to display an image.
It was the old monitors that only supported a single or fixed set of scan rates that you had to worry about damaging. Some could be very picky and others were more tolerant.
Is was those crappy winmodems that caused all the problems. They cheaped out on hardware, so you basically got a sound card. All of the work had to be done by the driver, which also put a lot of load on your CPU. Serial modems just worked since everything was done in hardware.
Sure, if you have enough data to make the cost of a tape drive worth it.
M-disc is for long term storage, which flash and hard drives are not suitable for.
Apple specifically designed their ARM CPUs to be able to efficiently translate x86 code. A generic ARM CPU won’t be able to get the same performance. Maybe other manufacturers will do the same as ARM PCs get more common.
The fact that almost no PC games support ARM is stopping them. When lots game developers start releasing ARM or RISC-V versions, then Valve may consider an ARM or RISC-V Steam Deck. They will still have to have an emulator to run the older x86 games though.
Of course it’s done intentionally so you have to buy a new motherboard. Stick with AMD if you want to be able to upgrade your CPU.
That version has been patched.
It’s called punycode. It’s just a way of encoding non ASCII characters in a URL.
Lutris uses separate prefixes and doesn’t do any deduplication. You will need a separate tool for that or just use a filesystem like btrfs that supports deduplication.
I’ve never used bottles, so I don’t know how it handles deduplication.
Another issue is that brltty can take over the serial port. The easiest fix is to just uninstall it if you don’t use a braille display.