![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/170721ad-9010-470f-a4a4-ead95f51f13b.png)
Did the same in school on a Z80
Did the same in school on a Z80
The problem with flux is that it is corrosive. If you use just the flux in the solder it shouldn’t be much of a deal, but if you use more flux I recommend washing it off.
I use 99.9% Isopropanol or an ultrasonic cleaner with water for this. If you use water do not use soap or anything else just water. Also make sure it is completely dry before connecting to power.
I don’t fall for this, I switch back to Windows
You can look into Plasma Bigscreen
I also found this, It’s for a RaspberryPi but surely can be adapted:
https://gist.github.com/seffs/2395ca640d6d8d8228a19a9995418211
You can look at the source of the snap and check what it does
I don’t have any experience with your exact question.
But I would look into xinit and try if you can start just mpv.
If this doesn’t work look for a slim WM and configer it that the applications are displayed in fullscreen and launch mpv after the WM.
Probably any of the tiling window managers should work: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Window_manager
I guess all of the mentioned are for rich people?
I think the licesing models and pricing are more interesting.
Thats what I would choose, from left to right:
RHEL, Mint, Arch, LFS
Might also switch the last two
My grandma has a house, where a part of it was built by the romans
+1 for nix, but I wouldn’t recommend it as a first distro
Squash me later
I guess if you have one of those fancy fridges where you can get cold water or ice. Some of them require a water connection
Create your input for email and password with the id / name “email” and “password” and hide them with CSS. Then you create the real inputs with an id like “zipcode” or some other thing that would throw bots off.
Password managers hate this trick
As are the numbers
If you create an image of the disk in the current state from a live boot or an other machine. You can try fixing it without having to risk making things worse
I also never used version pinning in debian