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postmarketos.org | ||
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www.tecmint.com
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| | | | | A rolling release system is a Linux distribution that is constantly updated in all aspects: from the software packages, desktop environment, to the kernel. | |
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www.padizio.com
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www.unsungnovelty.org
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| | | | | [AI summary] The user has written a comprehensive blog post discussing their personal experiences and recommendations regarding Linux distributions, particularly Arch Linux and Linux Mint, as well as other alternatives like Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and OpenSUSE. They also mention their growing interest in BSD systems such as FreeBSD, OpenBSD, DragonflyBSD, and NetBSD, and touch upon the use of Nix package manager. The post includes debunking myths about Linux, rolling release distributions, and hardware compatibility. The user concludes by recommending Arch and Linux Mint for personal computing and expresses a future interest in exploring BSD systems. | |
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dht.is
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| | | SOLVED posts detail solutions to problems I could not find anywhere else. After installing axe-cli in my Ubuntu/Windows 11 environment using Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), I got the following error whenever I tried to run it: Chrome failed to start: crashed (unknown error: DevToolsActivePort file doesn't exist) (The process started from chrome location [file path] is no longer running, so ChromeDriver is assuming that Chrome has crashed.) This can be caused by a lot of things (and I tried most of them), but in my case it was caused by Chrome not being installed in my WSL environment, which makes sense because I only use it for command line programs. | ||