

Pink flag, as in, red flag lite; or pink flag, as in, another term for a rainbow flag?
Pink flag, as in, red flag lite; or pink flag, as in, another term for a rainbow flag?
He looks like a rubber mask that started walking around.
Swarm shooter, reverse bullet hell, or enemy hell
Which errors are you getting? Because if it’s these ones…
then everything is OK. Those are perfectly normal boot messages.
If it’s the same errors, try the same solutions. If it’s different errors, tell us what they are.
Is it external? Then try disconnecting it.
Looks like this could be a BIOS problem. Does it actually attempt to boot from the Mint USB?
If not, then you will need to enter the BIOS setup screen and change the boot device order. Put “USB HDD” at the top, “internal HDD” and “CD drive” in the middle, and anything else at the bottom.
This might get rid of the “boot from URL” you’re seeing, by demoting “PXE network boot” from the boot order.
/dev/sr0
is the CD drive. Does your computer have one?
Do they have buttons you can use to turn them off?
When it was zoomed out, I thought it was a pillbug
What happened to…
what about…
or…
Found it, the original weapon system!
(WARNING: TV Tropes link!)
That is true. And it is probable that most of the mineral content would come from bones.
But when you say that there are bones burned to ash during the manufacturing process, that just sounds like a scare tactic!
Based on my knowledge, there is no process for manufacturing pet food or human food that involves burning the components to ash.
No! Clearly Harpo was one of the founding members of the Communist party!
ash is the amount of bones burned into ash during the manufacturing process
No, that is not correct. Ash content is a way to determine mineral content. It is analyzed by burning the food to ash.
Found it in about:profiles
. The actual directory was in ~/.var/app/org.mozilla.firefox/cache/mozilla/firefox
. I think the one in my home directory was a leftover from the old apt install.
Is it fixed now? (Firefox 135)
When I open profiles.ini
the only profile mentioned there is “default-esr”. That directory exists, and has a bunch of stuff in it, but I don’t see the profile in the profile manager.
The profile I’m using is called “default-release” and that directory does not exist, but does have an entry in the profile manager.
The directory “default” exists in the directory structure and in the profile manager, but the directory is almost empty. It has only one thing in it; a file called times.json
.
I created a new profile, and it doesn’t show up in the directory structure either. Curiouser and curiouser…
PS: It’s not a Snap, but it is a Flatpak.
Have you set up your /etc/crypttab
Yes, yes I have!
(e. g. do you need hibernation?)
No, I do not.
That’s the first thing I tried! No effect at all. Even when I enter a wrong password, nothing happens. It doesn’t echo, but I think it wouldn’t echo anyways.
Also, there’s not enough text that comes after decrypting the root for anything to get lost in the scrollback buffer.
Fresh new installation, but I can mount the home partition manually and continue booting.
Can you at least remove the
m.
from the link? If you’re on mobile, it will automatically redirect to the mobile site. But if you’re on desktop and them.
is still there, you have to manually remove it, and that’s really annoying because the mobile site is missing some important desktop features.