After looking around, you might be facing an issue with Flatpak permissions. Here’s a comment I found on Reddit created by u/avamk where they solved the same issue.
All right, after much trying I installed Flatseal and enabled the Firefox Flatpak’s access to my home folder.
After this, it created the expected profile folder under ~/.mozilla/firefox/. I put my custom userChrome.css into that profile folder, and >enabled it in my about:config under toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets per these instructions.
With all of these, the custom userChrome.css is finally working!
Link to original post: https://libreddit.tiekoetter.com/r/firefox/comments/rq40cj/cant_find_profile_folder_for_firefox_flatpak_on/
I’d love to read your explanation for each distro’s ranking.
As someone else has pointed out, it really depends on your use case. Although I personally keep my drives (SSD & HDD) in a redundant RAID configuration as my data is largely mission-critical.
Not OP, but I also use flat keycaps, so I thought I’d chime in. I’m not really sure why your hands would hurt with flat keycaps, but one of the reasons I chose to use flats were to allow for easier chording with Plover.
Looks nice! I daily drove something like this for a couple of years, then transitioned to a split ortholinear layout, so a bit different but pretty much the same thing.
Due to the relatively small size and overall complexity/tolerances required for the object, I wonder how it would have turned out if done on an SLA printer.
Currently, none. I used to use Netflix, Prime video and Spotify, but when they started removing some of my favorite content I went fully local.
Not that I’d recommend doing this, but back when I was younger, I had the not so bright idea that I could go to work come home, game the whole night, then go back to work. It was a terrible idea in hindsight, but I used to it a lot. To achieve this, I used to mix energy drinks and pre-workout to stay awake, and I’d drink it as though I was drinking water, so I ended up drinking a butt load. I just want to stress again though that I’d never recommend actually doing this though unless as a last resort, but even then I’d caution away from it. I get there are times when one feels they absolutely must stay awake, God knows the amount of times I accidentally slept through something, and ruined relationships, but as others have said planning is probably the issue you’re facing.
I use Firefox on both desktop and mobile and don’t have any issues.
This what you’re looking for?
If you want to self-host Lemmy you can just use this easy install script, just make sure to modify the config file to suite your setup it’s only a couple variables, and it’s pretty self-explanatory. https://github.com/ubergeek77/Lemmy-Easy-Deploy
The “official web app” is how people can self-host Lemmy, to access it as a user it’s just the website.
I just spent way too long playing that… lol, thanks!
Here are some links to places you can find communities:
There’s one other one, but I can’t remember it, I’ll update this if I can.
You could do your programming theoretically on any laptop, although I’d say faster the better/easier it’ll be for you in the long run. In regard to your comment on upgradability I’d recommend taking a look at a Framework laptop where their whole goal is repairability which comes with the added benefit of being upgradable.
How much space do you think you’ll need? What type of redundancy systems are you planning to put into place, or even still do you plan to put any redundancy systems in place? Is there a specific reason you’d like to go with an external hard drive over setting up an internal raid array of some sort? Was your plan simply to just have an external drive plugged into your pc through USB or USB-C?
I think these would be my main questions before I could feel comfortable pointing you in any directing, since naming a brand name or specific drive while efficient probably wouldn’t be good for you in the long run.
Thanks! While it may just be a manifest, I believe that allowing access no matter how small the project is always a solid option. Who knows, maybe one day a beginner coder may come across this and wonder how to replicate it for their own uses, and while I’m sure there are other sources they could reference having another is always helpful.
Is this up on Github, if not are there any plans to open source the project?
I’m using an Invidious instance.
Whoops, you found me. :P