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I’m so glad you can automate QA jobs
Silly cat :3
Sharkey: @backhdlp@woem.men
Mastodon: @backhdlp@tech.lgbt
pronouns.page: @BackHDLP
Old account: @backhdlp@lemmy.blahaj.zone
I’m so glad you can automate QA jobs
This just in: @gregorum@lemm.ee
admits to not knowing what the fediverse is – on the fediverse.
I’m gonna pretend like I didn’t post this on microblogging fedi 2 months ago already
Doesn’t work for me. Do you have any custom rules?
There’s a python library for everything
read the code and pretend you understand it (real understanding will slowly come with that)
To determine the current WM in Wayland, neofetch first tries getting the process connected to the current Wayland display. If that fails, it checks all running processes against a hardcoded list of known WMs (which includes river).
In practice, it seems to prefer the value of XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP, but idrk, neofetch is magic.
You might’ve seen people use fastfetch, which should just get it right, but is also magic, tho at least c and not bash.
you just like me frfr (I’d post here if I’d customize my bar)
wdym “just started”, it looks like you’re done
Right, forgot I wanted to mention that. Also, if you don’t want to use such a fancy tool, many media players have a simple tag editor built in.
yt-dlp (with --add-metadata) puts the channel name in the artist field and the video title as the track name. With --embed-thumbnail, it uses the thumbnail as the album art. This can all work, but only if your artist puts just the name in the title, and uses the album art as the thumbnail. The problem is when they don’t.
seems to be something to do with star wars
your desktop looks like a lock screen with the clock lol
false
tar: You must specify one of the '-Acdtrux', '--delete' or '--test-label' options
Try 'tar --help' or 'tar --usage' for more information.
zsh: exit 2 tar
luckily for me, Firefox is probably the most stable part of my system
The only reason I don’t bookmark much, is because I’m actively hoarding 517 tabs.
btw, if you’re using a system with the GNU coreutils, you can echo "<base64 encoded string>" | base64 -d
.
don’t need an extra guy