Should just be plug and play… If your browser is a snap or flatpak then you might need to give it permissions to access your usb devices.
Should just be plug and play… If your browser is a snap or flatpak then you might need to give it permissions to access your usb devices.
Linux: Evolution (because it’s always open for my org mail) Android: Feeder
For gnome login, (on Fedora at least) you need to install the packages and edit PAM config to enable the yubikey with login.
Maybe a corrupt download/copy of a library… Try a reinstall of say glibc ?
Importantly and how it’s different to FF is that it boots the content without calling the disk reset and if you keep the disk button wedged then that reset never triggers, so that copy protection isn’t called, where as FF basically triggers a drive reset which is why you couldn’t use that.
I can confirm works for at least the last 7 years of the entire XPS range and the last 3 years of the latitude range.
Also you can update via the bios/uefi using a usb drive anyway, just pop the exe on and pick that.
Looks like Three doesn’t block it…
Statping-ng has had some updates beyond the base.
Snorkeling is probably your best choice as it did show latency overall and not just up/down.
Try manually ‘tar xvf file.ova’ however it sounds like the ova might be corrupt…
Yes 🤣🤣
Most distros will run the grab is prober and add the additional entries.
For the most part, this seems a fairly sane proposal.
Write your own selinux module with audit2allow.
I’m not at work so I can’t find the guides I use but this looks similar https://danwalsh.livejournal.com/24750.html
apt-get remove gnome* on a Debian install that was installed via floppy disk.
Myself over NFS can have serious latency issues. Some software can’t correctly file lock over NFS too which will cause write latency or just full blown errors.
iSCSI drops however can be really really bad and cause full filesystem corruption. Also backing up iSCSI volumes can be tricky. Software will likely work better and feel happy however and underlying issues may be masked until they’re unfixable. (I had an iSCSI volume attached to vmware silently corrupt for months before it failed and lost the data even though all scrubs/checksums were good until the very least moment).
You can make your situations with with either technology, both are just as correct. Would get a touch more throughput on iSCSI simply down to the write confirmation being drive based and not filesystem locks / os based.
YMMV
We have had the 13" 2in1 XPS and found Fedora and Stylus support to be good (once the drivers were available, the downside of getting a prerelease model).
We recommend our users to have xournal++ for handwriting support.
I’ve had issues with this too and reverted back to rooted docker. I even tried podman and system NFS mounts that it binds too with varying issues.
It looks like you can’t actually do this with podman for varying reasons.
You just extract the package and install it manually… It isn’t a complex deb at all. The hardest part is ensuring you have the libfprint-tod package.
If you follow the fedora guide and alter it for your distro it should work as the guide is mainly about compiling.
Also the deb should install on other derivatives as it isn’t Ubuntu specific. YMMV.
It’s the networking stack causing the panic, my guess is the WiFi card gets sad.