Hopefully it’s more like D2:R than WC3:R. D2:R is in my opinion very well done, too bad they only did a few updates before leaving it.
Hopefully it’s more like D2:R than WC3:R. D2:R is in my opinion very well done, too bad they only did a few updates before leaving it.
No they start preschool from 1yr old if the parents want, but it is compulsory to enroll at 6. The year for six year olds is also a bit different from the first years with more focus on familiarising with school routines and learning - but still lots of play
It is already using plasma 6 since a few weeks back, or am I miss interpreting something?
In Sweden it’s quite common to heat single family homes with geo. Here is a report I found from where table T2.6 breaks down different heating. Link to the Excel sheet
As of 2021 14% used geo (berg/jord/sjö) roughly translated ~ bedrock/ground/lake. And 10% used geo in combo with something else, usually some sort of wood burning stove.
Page with more info (in Swedish) The Swedish Energy Agency
Get the token from the cookie instead of the Authorization header
Sweden reporting
It un-fucked itself thankfully, I haven’t done anything to resolve that issue. But when I ran the update today it went well with several new packages. Which means Nobara or Fedora pushed some changes to packages in the repos.
Yeah I forgot to mention that I’ll not be using dnf manually but rely on nobara-sync. But I must stress that I already did that before this issue, BUT I followed advice on nobaras own website where the solution was to use dnf
and I still ended up with this problem. The real issue was still my own though, I should have upgraded to Nobara 38 before trying the workarounds, since 37 isn’t supported any more.
Yeah I kind of realised that the instructions assumed I had already upgraded, will try to keep track of new updates better in the future. So for sake of completion here’s how I solved it in the end:
file /usr/lib64/libopenh264.so.2.3.1 conflicts between attempted installs of openh264-2.3.1-2.fc38.x86_64 and noopenh264-0.1.0~openh264_2.3.1-2.fc38.x86_64
sudo dnf -v system-upgrade download --releasever=38 --allowerasing --exclude=openh264.x86_64
--best --allowerasing'
and see what else breaks:Problem: The operation would result in removing the following protected packages: plasma-desktop
================================================================================
Package Arch Version Repository Size
================================================================================
Skipping packages with conflicts:
(add '--best --allowerasing' to command line to force their upgrade):
kde-settings noarch 38.2-5.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 33 k
libkworkspace5 x86_64 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 115 k
libkworkspace5 x86_64 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 115 k
plasma-workspace-common x86_64 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 41 k
plasma-workspace-common x86_64 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 40 k
plasma-workspace-libs x86_64 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 2.2 M
plasma-workspace-libs x86_64 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 2.2 M
plasma-workspace-wayland
x86_64 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 70 k
plasma-workspace-wayland
x86_64 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 70 k
Skipping packages with broken dependencies:
kde-settings-plasma noarch 38.2-5.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 13 k
plasma-lookandfeel-fedora
noarch 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 403 k
plasma-workspace i686 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-multilib-38 15 M
plasma-workspace x86_64 5.27.8-1.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 15 M
plasma-workspace i686 5.27.9.1-2.fc38 nobara-baseos-multilib-38 15 M
plasma-workspace i686 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-multilib-38 15 M
plasma-workspace x86_64 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 15 M
plasma-workspace-x11 x86_64 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 68 k
sddm-breeze noarch 5.27.9.1-3.fc38 nobara-baseos-38 440 k
Transaction Summary
================================================================================
Skip 18 Packages
That is helpful, I’m not sure what I’m looking for yet though. But another comment lead me into antialiasing and this line in the history seems plausible.
install -y /tmp/zenity/nobara-amdgpu-config/fedora-amdgpu-pro/packages/amdamf-pro-runtime-5.4.3-4.fc37.x86_64.rpm /tmp/zenity/nobara-amdgpu-config/fedora-amdgpu-pro/packages/amd-gpu | 2023-04-25 20:11 | I, O | 11
Undo didn’t work though:
sudo dnf history undo 11
Error: The following problems occurred while running a transaction:
Cannot find rpm nevra “amd-gpu-firmware-20230404-149.fc37.noarch”.
So I made a rollback to my last know stable point: sudo dnf history rollback 2
It didn’t exactly workout either unfortunately:
Transaction history is incomplete, before 73.
ransaction history is incomplete, before 72.
Transaction history is incomplete, after 71.
Transaction history is incomplete, before 61.
Transaction history is incomplete, after 60.
Transaction history is incomplete, before 8.
Transaction history is incomplete, before 7.
Transaction history is incomplete, after 6.
Error: The following problems occurred while running a transaction:
Cannot find rpm nevra “ImageMagick-c+±1:6.9.12.82-1.fc37.x86_64”.
… many lines more about pkgs not found
I’ll do a reboot and see what actually took effect. Atleast I’m learning something, maybe I should do all my upgrades via dnf
instead of the manager in the future, easier to know whats going on.
Turning AA off for fonts solved the missing characters, downside it doesn’t look very good. I still have glitchy artefacts in some menus and the package manager doesn’t display any text for buttons which is a bit problematic. Guessing disabling some more AA settings would remove more of the problems. But it doesn’t solve my main problem - why did AA break in the first place
I pretty new to Linux gaming but I love it. Currently playing games directly from Steam and Blizzard games via Bottles. Please help me out with a few questions. What is the use case for gamescope? What is the use case for Heroic? Is it instead of Bottles/Lutris?
You’ll be able to play it just fine via Bottles or Lutris or similar wine tool.
If it happens, who would buy it? Amazon, M$? Much good that would do, just shift power from one giant to the next. Maybe if IBM bought it and ran it to the ground after a few years…