- 32 Posts
- 11 Comments
- zephyr@lemmy.worldtoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is the most destroying command you can type in the Linux terminal?25·2 years ago
Everyone is talking about
rm -rf /
and damage to storage drives, but I read somewhere about EFI variables having something to do with bricking the computer. If this is possible, then it’s a lot more damage than just disk drives.Edit: this is interesting SE post https://superuser.com/questions/313850
- zephyr@lemmy.worldtoPrivacy@lemmy.ml•Dropbox is sharing users' files with OpenAI, here's how to opt out36·2 years ago
Yet another reminder that the cloud is just a fancy name for someone else’s computer.
Woah. Interesting setup. Looks like a PinePhone with 3D-printed case. But what about the keyboard? and the original Android status bar?
Dope logo. Reminds me of Tutanota.
Great prompt OP. It’s great to reflect and share those moments.
For me it’s a management trick that I realized after having my files (computer ones and physical ones) all over the place.
You don’t have to have a file for everything. Instead create a dump.txt file in every directory instead of having few paragraphs scattered in files.
This way I separate “organizing files” from actually typing out my thoughts.
- zephyr@lemmy.worldtoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is something that sounds 100% false but is actually 100% true?English0·2 years ago
Your skull acts as an antenna
How?
What’s the original template of the meme called?
- zephyr@lemmy.worldtoYou Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK - X percent of Y is equal to Y percent of X. So, if you want to find out what 7% of 50 is, you could instead find out what 50% of 7 is, which is 3.5. This means that 7% of 50 is also equal to 3.5.1·2 years ago
Percentage is just a fancy form of decimal point. I just multiply them together then move decimal digit to the left twice.
And I was just asking yesterday what would you feel if someone evil used your FOSS software: https://lemmy.world/post/16898871