As someone new to both, I’m commenting to hear your answer to the other person’s “why?” :)
As someone new to both, I’m commenting to hear your answer to the other person’s “why?” :)
For OP - Bazzite works a little differently as an immutable OS. Basically only a small handful of directories are editable, and the immutable nature is intended to help provide stability, particularly for users who don’t want to tinker as much (at least that’s my understanding).
Here’s their documentation on auto mounting drives. You’ll probably want the link titled “KDE Partition Manager Guide” under GUI Methods.
But you can edit /etc/fstab
as suggested here, and I’ve done it that way. Just need to mount it under /var/mnt/
and disregard locations recommended by guides that pertain to other distros.
Edit: just saw someone else posted the same link, whoops!
I’m not super familiar with either, but are you aware of Rescuezilla? It’s a GUI for Clonezilla. I used it for some simple things once or twice recently that I didn’t feel merited learning Clonezilla’s CLI.
Your mom’s a bait!
Okay joke is played out, sorry I’m done
Ahem. This is the internet, surely you’re aware of where you are?
What, you’re just gonna…agree to disagree or something? Throwing out decades of tradition? What’s next? Just gonna let someone be factually incorrect about something without a word of recrimination or even basic correction?!
You’re headed down a dark path.
LOL
Boy have I got news for you…
I like my genes pure, unmodified whatsoever - just the way they arise from the primordial soup.
FWIW I boot Bazzite in desktop mode with two 27" displays and have been very happy. Mixed use, not nearly as much gaming as it’s really intended for most of the time, and occasionally patchy experience but (un-)usually great. So many quality of life little doodads.
For instance, the screens brighten and dim effortlessly with my scroll wheel on a widget in the taskbar, just by default. Discovered it by accident lol, what else don’t I know?!
It’s excellent. Folks should use it.
Whoops 😅
Nah, this seems like a big deal. Not necessarily “imminent doom for Twitter” big, but still. Social media platforms live and die on network effects, and none (that I’m aware of) has ever successfully “forced” their own viability without having naturally strong network effects.
Network effects work in favor of signups and engagement of course, but they work on the downswing too, they can accelerate abandonment and replacement.
Hard agree, I have a B&W laser of theirs from similar era bought new and it just works and works.