![](https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/pictrs/image/bfeedf5f-8c98-40bd-a816-43a847b8981c.webp)
![](https://fry.gs/pictrs/image/c6832070-8625-4688-b9e5-5d519541e092.png)
Microsoft is probably drooling at the prospect. They’ve been trying to get that IE monopoly back since this happened to them.
Microsoft is probably drooling at the prospect. They’ve been trying to get that IE monopoly back since this happened to them.
People’s brains are so baked by the dopamine slot machine of the internet that the most compelling part has to be put in the first couple words or people won’t read it.
The built-in software keyboard of the Steam Deck is good enough for me for small amounts of text. If I know I’ll need to type a lot, I’ll just connect a real keyboard.
I thought the Steam Deck was essentially the Steam Controller 2, or at least the result of the R&D put into a new Steam Controller.
I have this issue too, and I figured out a workaround. Deleting the files manually via rm frees up space. Deleting files via qBittorrent via UI or automatically does not.
Turns out the files were just being moved to a “.Trash-UID” (where UID is the UID of the container) folder in the /downloads directory (or wherever that folder is mapped to on your host). Clearing that out freed up the space.
I suspect this is a bug where the “Delete files permanently” setting is not being respected. You might want to set up a cron job to delete that folder periodically in the meantime.
This app looks cool in theory, but after about 2 hours acquiring API keys from 3rd party platforms and messing around with the docker-compose.yml, the application cannot connect to the mariadb container–it keeps claiming romm is unauthenticated despite checking the credentials several times.
Judging by my experience and the many stale bugs on this project, it doesn’t look like this is ready.