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  • If the partition where your OS stores boot images at is large enough, you can have practically infinitely many kernels in grub.

    Some distros store those in a boot partition. Some store it in the root partition subdir. I don't know about ubuntu tbh.

    I once had a 2gb boot partition and I needed to add a graphics stack to the boot image so I could use a touchscreen keyboard during boot to enter a LUKS password. That made a single kernel image over 1gb, so I could only have one...

  • Is your laptop maybe in powersave mode?

    You didn't provide any details, so wild guesses only here. idk about mint but on kde the button to switch modes is meta+B ... if your distro provides the right packages for that functionality out of the box. I'm sure there is a terminal command to check it too.

  • I tried pausing and reading and their "arguments" were so yes-man like that they seemed to not really want to debate or lean one way or the other and basically were saying it depends on context or that it could be seen as either. Which is fine, but meaningless in the context of wanting to come up with an answer. Any question can be replied to with "it depends", without really answering the question in a satisfying way.

    I think it would make more sense to either use an odd number of LLMs, or let them abstain if they are undecided - to try to force them to come up with a clear cut answer.

    Then there is also the issue of swarm intelligence, which does not get used here at all, because it only works if the voters DO NOT discuss their thinking before the vote, thus influencing each other. One LLM could be confidently wrong, but because they all are such yes-man - the strongest, most confident sounding voice linguistically, might overweight the correct "thinking".

    So yeah, this seems like a bad approach to a really interesting problem.

    Here are some interesting reads on this topic:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackboard_(design_pattern)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackboard_system

  • I had a case that looked like that, because the nozzle was scraping the previous layer of the print.

    I think that for some reason the layers below were physically taller than in softwas and the additive effect of that stacked and reached critical failure at a certain height. It started as soft scraping and got worse as it went on until it failed like that because it essentially skipped a whole layer. No enclosure/heating chamber btw. It was always the same height for that model, but then a smaller model like a benchie would have no issues on that height. I guess because the filament was warmer due to the smaller loops, so more mendible or less expanded somehow, idk.

    I dried my filament so it stopped making bubbles and ran some filament specific calibration and also I changed the extrusion to be a bit lower. Then the issue was gone.

  • I feel like by "scaling" they mean upgradability. So either vertical (adding more drives, ram, cpu) or horizontal (adding more boxes that loadbalance an increase of multiple parallel tasks/users) hahaha ooops

    1. use a modern, popular distro. There are less things broken and you get more support
    2. do a fresh install with a fresh user to nor carry over your broken configs and customizations. Do everything from scratch again
    3. Tackle the issues one by one and provide detailed steps to reproduce, error messages, logs, screenshots or videos. You can ask right here on lemmy, but you'll probably get more eyes on it on reddit tbh.

    I felt just like you a long time ago when kde introduced wayland at the end of 2016. After a couple of super frustrating months, I made a backup of my /home, migrated my archlinux to btrfs (by doing a fresh install) so I can have snapshots and revert if I mess something.

    Had only minor issues since then and most have been fixed some years later. Others I've learned how to work around (for example by using gamescope, because I have mixed resolution multi monitor setup and some games think my 2k screen is 4k)

  • I mean, if you try to "scam" the gov, you can clone some codeberg repo to github, rename it, rewrite history to make the commits look like you did everything and then tell the gov "look at how much work I volunteered". At least in germany, there are currently not enough public workers so many little things go unchecked.

  • It's really touching that you consider me to be a sysadmin, because I use Linux and know how my fs works. I'm actually kinda proud of myself. My arch install has been working for many years.