I would use $
too for the example you’ve posted - it is just assuming a different user.
As long as it is not root, I wouldn’t put it with #
.
I would use $
too for the example you’ve posted - it is just assuming a different user.
As long as it is not root, I wouldn’t put it with #
.
Paddle pop drink!
Paddle pop drink!
I had good results with microwaving a bunch of beads in a microwave safe non-plastic bowl on mid-low.
It drives out the moisture, and you can see the bead colour indicators change.
But be careful, they’re hot!
Looks like one of those recorded message things you find inside greeting cards - the glob of stuff below the black epoxy blob (the ic), looks like a badly corroded button.
Can try cleaning the button up a bit, or removing it entirely, and bridge the connections beneath it.
Yeah! It’s thankless work, and not a full time job, so hope it “gets released when it gets released”.
Just wanna drop in my vote of thanks in supporting Lemmy and wanting to do an app for it 👍
I’m thinking this would be the case if your instance had more than 1 user subscribed to that community in the large instance - but if it is just you, wouldn’t it be similar to accessing each instance and viewing the communities there?
Agreed, the external connections like USB-C/USB4 will probably last a good long time.
I was thinking more of the internal stuff like the display connector (not sure what framework currently uses - eDP/LVDS/something else?), and all the input connectors for keyboard and trackpad.
Think this is more of a pipe-dream though, considering that 10 years is a long time for PC interfaces and internal interconnects. Swapping between different laptop manufacturers will be unlikely to happen, I feel.
Framework allowing for the whole mainboard to be replaced seems like a good halfway meeting point, and each case size being a constant chassis that hopefully will be supported for a long while.
Hope that other manufacturers follow suit, and at least have their own lines of upgradable laptops.
The community browser (https://browse.feddit.de/) is your friend here - it can see across most instances, and searches here (rather then directly in the ”search communities” feature in your instance) to find communities.
Once you got the full identifier (like for this /c it is [!nostupidquestions@lemmy.world](/c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world)
), you can then directly look it up in your instance’s Search)
Ref: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/en/users/01-getting-started.html#following-communities
I did encounter some times where I searched for a /c that should exist, but some how not findable via my instance though - hope someone more knowledgeable can chime in. (Yup, I did check that my instance federates with the other instance).
In any case, if you can’t find it in the community browser, feel free to be the one to start it on your instance!
Perhaps you could share what is the model of your thin client? So we can get a grasp of what we’re dealing with.
Good starting points: https://www.parkytowers.me.uk/thin/