I run udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdX#
in the terminal. When it completes, it means the files have finished copying and the partition was unmounted.
Imnebuddy - pronounced “I am any buddy”
Techie, hippie, commie nerd
I run udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdX#
in the terminal. When it completes, it means the files have finished copying and the partition was unmounted.
Creating a mesh would make sense in your instance. I recommend following this video.
I was able to get some Linksys E8450 routers for cheap (~$40 each) on eBay a couple years ago, but they are more expensive atm (but $70 each, which is cheaper than a lot of other options). They require a bit of work to get OpenWRT installed, but it’s not bad once the work is done (I have received nearly 400 Mb/s when I am close to the wireless connection sometimes, which is what my internet is capped at). I have used them as a mesh with one as a main gateway and the rest as access points with additional Ethernet ports. They do have the OKD issue fixed now, too, and they’re also Wi-Fi 6. I’m looking into getting a Banana Pi BPI-R3 or R4, though I am not sure how well they are with mesh specifically, but have seen a few forum threads of people having some issues with mesh on these specific routers. I hope to switch to fast roaming (wired backhaul) eventually.
https://github.com/exander77/proton-bridge-android
There is a way to do it locally on an Android device using Termux.
I hope there will be native Linux support, even if it comes a few years after it is released. CrossCode is supported on various platforms, and it even has a web version for its demo.
$0/month for unlimited domains and catch-all aliases (only email forwarding)
$3/month for unlimited domains and aliases for a “single user”
$9/month for teams:
Windows: What is my purpose?
User: You are a bootloader to install Linux.
This is how to trim a curve on a point in FreeCAD. Honestly hilarious. Tried using it recently, and I couldn’t follow a basic tutorial without it breaking. This is a recent fair review of FreeCAD, and it still needs a lot of work even after its 1.0 release before it is worth using. I’m considering going back to OpenSCAD for a simple project, and then I will try using build123d in python (CadQuery is a more user-friendly alternative, at least as far as I am told).
I’m curious how well these CAD kernel projects written in Rust will turn out: Fornjot / Truck