

Can someone provide the original?
Impressive. Very nice.
Let’s see Paul Allen’s Desktop
I wish you the best on your winter vacation to hell
Have a pint with the lads
Pedro looks like an absolute legend
What the fuck is this?
He makes some fair points but I fully agree with your sentiment.
Had this man made a less confrontational and more educational video, he would be much more widely regarded as a fair source. Alas, he thinks the raging grants him clicks
Sorry, I fell in love with you and couldn’t hold back so I made an alt to DM you
It’s worse. It is utterly abandoned by rockstar
Sopuli Represent!
Hell yeah brother. Fact check those fascists
Try picking the “Disabled” option for each dropdown.
I believe that you can choose it in the list of options that appear when you press Proaudio, for example
I had this problem too and solved it by just telling the OS not to use those “devices” through that same same GUI in the picture.
AK47s for everyone!
I wanted to learn (…)
Well, you make the finest point
Thank you for answering. I will research some more to see how well it works with my setup.
Thanks for all your work!
I use docker for my *arr stack. I’ve never had any problems just logging into radarr and sonarr to check what media I have and its stats.
Tell me:
Why should I use this?
What advantages does this give me over using each service’s GUI?
Is there any plan for a GUI?
Is this a substitute for something else you felt did not do enough?
What modifications are needed for integration with docker containers?
Hi, I use MX Linux. It’s main attraction to me is being debian based with a useful tool suite which helps a lot if you’re not of the mind of using the terminal for tasks which have proper GUIs.
Is it good or bad? Depends on your use case. I’ll say, tho, having to migrate my whole computer when upgrading (like from release 20 to 21) can be a pain in the ass as it limits your upgrades to the release you’re using (20.1 can upgrade to 20.2 but 20.3 can’t upgrade to 21.0). But it’s debian, so the upgrades are mostly stable
It’s main popularity on distrowatch is derived from curiosity clicks.
Picture this:
You open distro watch and see a “popular” distro you have never heard of.
You click that distro’s page to check
That click bumps MX up in the rankings
More people see this uncommon “popular” distro leading the ranks
They check the distro page
Rinse and repeat
Popping a cold one for our boy Antonio.