Mobile improvements would be huge!
I’ve been using this for a couple weeks now and completely replaced OneNote with it (been wanting to ditch OneNote for awhile). It’s been very smooth, nice work!
Mobile improvements would be huge!
I’ve been using this for a couple weeks now and completely replaced OneNote with it (been wanting to ditch OneNote for awhile). It’s been very smooth, nice work!
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Makes sense. Well, best of luck with it. That’s super annoying, sorry I couldn’t help. If you do figure it out and remember this, I would love to know what the answer was!
Did some looking around and what I found is it could be a sign that the cable is starting to fail:
https://askubuntu.com/questions/1118738/whats-the-likely-cause-of-a-get-monitor-geometry-assertion
Do you have another cable you could try?
It could also be a bug in Gnome, since you said it only happens after something like a kernel update. I wonder if it would happen if you used a live usb of gnome, and if so, would it happen if you used a live usb of KDE or some other desktop manager.
Any system logs that might be related to the display not being detected properly?
Since you’re using AMD graphics, you’re using the open source drivers right? The proprietary AMD drivers are not good.
Well, issues 1-3 could all easily be GPU driver related. Which GPU are you using, and what drivers?
The Steam UI thing sounds like an issue like maybe hardware acceleration being disabled?
They generally have really great linux support for all of their hardware (touchpads, fingerprint readers, etc.), and provide bios updates via fwdup. They are also just nice laptops.
It does support bios updates. That’s how I do mine on my laptop (a Lenovo).
This is making me realize that I have never encountered this equivalent of a blue screen of death on Linux.
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Ah that makes much more sense. I think I crossed my wires. You mentioned backing up the Minecraft worlds and so I thought “deduplicated backups… so borg.”
I appreciate your explanation.
Is there a link?
Also, how does this compare to something like Borg?
I found this amusing enough to try it out. It does actually compile (I used g++ for this). However, the current implementation just goes into an infinite loop if you enter a number >= 2.
I think the original author meant to do n -= 1 rn
in the tweakin
loop that is inside the bussin
loop. That way, at some point n % i finna cap
will be false, and i
will bouta
. Which then makes the expression i <= n
in the bussin
loop eventually false, so we stop bussin
and yeet cap rn
.
However, that would mean that the intention of the program isn’t to output prime factors, because even with this fix it does not do so. The structure of mf chief()
also doesn’t suggest that is the purpose as it is missing another tweakin
and sussin
like this example of calculating prime factors in C++.
Example run:
$ ./zpp.exe
Enter a number larger than 1: 50
2
7
8
47
Sorry, this isn’t helpful. I migrated the hard way, hah. I just went to each page in OneNote and hit ctrl+a, copied that and pasted without formatting into TriliumNext, then fixed the formatting.
It took some time, but was worth it to me. I figured it would be a good test to help me familiarize myself with TriliumNext a little.
An easier path to help adoption would probably go a long way, but it also might eat up a lot of development time and routinely need work. I’m not sure how often the OneNote export formats change.