

Nobody reads the articles.
Nobody reads the articles.
You have to click through the reddit link to find the “original”, which is a perplexity AI generated “article”. It’s all AI slop.
Windows and Linux can mount ISOs without additional software. Macs can mount DMGs.
Either way, you could preload that software before the file.
*efficiency
32! = 263130836933693530167218012160000000
Is that in picoseconds since the unix epoch?
Never used tartube, but yt-dlp supports chapters and splitting. See the manual, or search for examples via your favorite engine.
You would be better served by asking questions in the existing post, instead of starting multiple new ones. Besides, these questions were already answered.
LoongArch sure is loong
Although it’s a bit dated, so I don’t think it supports luks in the GUI. You might have to use it as a visual reference and do it via the command line.
Usually the guy with a bunch of questions gets charged extra for being a nuisance while the guy is trying to work.
I’d check, but they use anubis in front of gitlab, and either it’s broken or turned up too high because it’s blocking me even though I’m just using standard Firefox on Android, nothing fancy.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-disk-utility
Edit: it started working. No, GPLv2 or later.
Fun fact, you probably download the file anyway because it’s smaller than one of the torrent blocks. That block contains info from a file you do want, so you download the whole block. Your torrent client just puts that file in a different place.
So ultimately it doesn’t make a difference, except to show you the file. If you don’t actually look at the files that often, I’d leave that file checked just to make it less complicated.
It is not going to matter. If the malware can escape the VM, it’s going to do that regardless of host network access.
Sure. Put whatever file into an iso and mount it.
Didn’t need to, our developers work on Linux because that’s what their tooling uses.
Granted it’s either Ubuntu LTS or RHEL because of compliance, but they make it work. Unfortunately Linux is a second-class citizen to central IT, so when they make changes, they don’t really consider Linux users, they’re on their own.
A lot of enterprise security software has a Linux version, because a lot of servers run Linux, and they need to have the software for compliance. There is no shortage in that space.
You should really just back up your files, do a fresh install, and don’t fuck with the system like that.
Create an ISO and mount that.
But really, it doesn’t matter how you get the file in before you open it. It’s extremely unlikely that it malware could be executed just by putting a file on disk.
Bring up networking manually?
Or just back up your files and reinstall.
Dell is not linux-first, but they do officially support Ubuntu for some models.