That's a troubling state! My first guess would be your system memory being not great seated, which Linux handles more gratefully.
Do you see any errors in the Linux log?
That's a troubling state! My first guess would be your system memory being not great seated, which Linux handles more gratefully.
Do you see any errors in the Linux log?
ShareX is amazing, it just needs a big UX improvement. If you're not technical of nature, the program is kinda too much at once. I can't recommend it easely to my family until it has a simpler interface option.
Going to the grocery store or the gym is faster by foot then by car.
"Every important sideways manoeuvre" is what I learned from my driving instructor. I sometimes even feel a bit bad when I forget to use my indicator.
Can I make a small complaint here that the 3 blinks your car does is way too short to start and finish most actions?
Our preferred way of doing this is have a pot of near boiling water with the plate on top next to the pan I'm baking the pancakes on. Pile the pancakes directly on the plate.
This keeps the plate hot and maintains the temperature of the bottom pancakes while you're making a larger batch. remove the plate carefully after baking, wipe the bottom of the plate dry and put it on the table. Hot pancakes for the entire meal!
This is for dutch pancakes BTW, no clue how it would go for American or other more fluffy pancakes.
please killall
I see...
Stealth.
For how long can we ignore those consequences?
Generic mockery always works:
Out of general curiosity, what hotel is it? asking for a friend ofc
Simplest solution would be to setup the nfs/smb as storage for backups and making a backup schedule. Datacenter -> Storage -> Add -> SMB/CIFS
Datacenter > Backup > Add
journalctl is usually the way yes, you can also check dmesg if it's part of your distro. Errors are usually highlighted in red, that's something to scan for. You can use
journalctl -ef
to keep the log updating on your screen, if the issue is intermittent, it might take a bit before it shows up. If the issue is logged on boot, it should be injournalctl -b
Does htop/free show the correct amount of memory?
Also try applying load on the system, maybe it's a thermal or power delivery issue.
Do you have a overclock enabled in your bios? Try disabling that and XMP if enabled.