I second the wayland option. Then you at least have a working gui with all your settings and recent work intact while you try to find the glitch in your Xorg install.
A typical bike-riding leftist urbanite who also happens to be a hockey-crazy Western Canadian.
I second the wayland option. Then you at least have a working gui with all your settings and recent work intact while you try to find the glitch in your Xorg install.
There’s openSUSE tumbleweed. It’s rpm based like fedora and it’s rolling-release like arch. I don’t know what the 3rd party/nonfree software situation is like. Maybe someone else can chime in on that front.
I will add, as an arch user, I think you could easily tweak your current system to be less annoying with the updates, but I realize that’s not the question you’re asking so feel free to disregard that.
Depending what format of audio, you can embed the image into the metadata
I mean, technically Linux is still at 2.6, they’ve just been making up version numbers for the last 20 years or so.
Since we’re on the topic, does anyone know if there’s a Fargo community in existence somewhere on Lemmy?
I never really thought about it before, but it seems obvious now. Trekkies and open source tech folks would have a massive overlap, and Lemmy kind of exists perfectly within that intersection of utilitarian principles. So of course we would all find each other here.
For the past couple weeks it’s been Flower Moon by Dooms Children
You wasted 3 hours of your life so far lol
But yeah. I find the most mysterious and time-consuming of problems are usually caused by a very minor detail that is so obvious it gets overlooked immediately.
And even if you know that’s probably the case, sometimes your brain will just discard information that isn’t consistent with its assumed reality, and it tells you the piece of code you just read is fine when it’s obviously not.
Troubleshooting/debugging is fun.
The upper management has lost the plot. 2 bad moves in the past week and I assume more to come if things don’t immediately turn around. Such a shame.
Not just mp3, all lossy audio formats use psychoacoustic analysis. That’s how they figure out which data to throw out.