This must be the famous Linux-to-queer pipeline I’ve heard so much about.
I take my shitposts very seriously.
This must be the famous Linux-to-queer pipeline I’ve heard so much about.
Riot was/is also a cesspit of sexual harrassment and discrimination, but nobody seems to remember.
Embracer is a sickness, a malignant fucking growth on gaming.
If you really, really, really don’t want to buy a keyboard and monitor, you can buy a USB KVM console, but it’ll likely cost more. Something like this: https://www.startech.com/en-us/server-management/notecons01
Oracle was one of the first companies on my personal shit-list. I feel validated.
make the tedious levels less annoying
They’d better not touch the Library!
Let the voices win. Pet her.
I’m in the same position, and it feels so damn powerful. I’ve convinced an entire university to ditch Ubuntu in favor of Linux Mint, and I’m also advocating for replacing our aging VMWare servers (with a soon-to-expire license) with Proxmox.
“I admire this person’s work and influence on my life. Now a disgusting little worm that lives in one particular Mesoamerican cave is named after then.”
Damn, I had no idea netcat
had a hardware implementation
Silksong and the year of the Linux desktop are joined by a third challenger!
Dicks out for Tim the pencil!
These gifts are getting out of hand. How did she keep it under wraps in the first place?
Mom says it’s my turn with the single universal electron!
It suffers from the same iconic issues as Ubisoft games: mid gameplay stretched out far too much. It has some interesting concepts, but doesn’t do anything noteworthy with them. Skip or buy at a heavy discount.
“I copied this spell from an overflowing stack of tomes. I think it was originally meant to cleanse all living things from religious stonework, but I changed some of the constants now it works as disinfectant.”
Drop the apogee just a bit to scoop up some crisp ozone-rich air
Not exactly. When you select a text and copy it, the two selections will end up containing the same text, but you can write to either selection without affecing the other by using an API, e.g. a website’s “copy to clipboard” button, or xclip
/wl-copy
.
Clipboard managers with a history feature are an altogether different layer on top of the standard selections. Plasma’s clipboard manager only cares about the clipboard selection, and even then, there are exceptions (e.g. copying a password for KeepassXC doesn’t save it in the history).
Yes. X11 replaced X10’s obsolete cut buffers (which can be modified by any process) with state-of-the-art selections. There are three selections in X11: a primary, a secondary, and a clipboard.
In modern desktops, the primary selection is overwritten every time you select some text (including in the terminal), which makes its content very ephemeral. You can paste it with the middle mouse button.
The secondary selection is generally not used, but it’s present in the specification, and you can use xclip -selection secondary
to access it. Wayland doesn’t seem to have a secondary selection.
The clipboard selection is what most people understand to be THE clipboard. You have to write to it explicitly (through a keyboard shortcut, API, or CLI tool), and its content persists until it is overwritten, explicitly cleared, or the X server is killed. While the primary and secondary can only contain text, the clipboard can contain many kinds of data.
From Divinity Original Sin 2 co-op. Not my campaign, but I was wheezing for five minutes from this:
“So are we the bad guys?”
“I don’t know, but I’m about to kill her with her own dad.”