This is waybar not awesome no? Afaik awesome does not ship its own bar. So I'd look through waybar documentation or a waybar config file in the awesome examples. Also this is probably just naming a desktop with a unicode icon so that it shows the icon in waybar
CaptainJack42
The short answer, as a ton of people already said in the comments of the video, is "hell no" it is not and it is most likely also not worth it. Back when the video came out I tested it (with unplugged network) on my system and the performance gain was ~1% which I'd consider well within the margin of error
Aha da hat wohl noch jemand methodisch inkorrekt gehört, wollte gerade genau das gleiche schreiben ^^
Hyprland is decent, it's one of the better Wayland window managers, that being said it's still in beta and not complete. Also be aware, it's a window manager, not a desktop environment. It won't do much besides well managing windows, taskbar, start menu, notification demon,... have to all be installed and setup by you and the config is done in text files, not some gui.
Also the community is rather toxic, I've made similar experiences to this in the past when trying it out.
Unless you mess around with firewall commands/settings you don't understand firewalld should be sufficient.
That being said you might have to allow certain services at some point (openvpn) for example
Alt/Ctrl+___ are usually used by applications and shortcuts containing Super+___ are usually "reserved" (it's no rule or anything but basically no application uses Super) for the DE. That's why Super is probably the best mod key for shortcuts. You can ofc use Alt+___ as well, in that case your DE/WM will just take preference over the application and the shortcut will be handled by the DE/WM instead of the application
Factorio.
The factory must grow!
I was lvl 100sth and on my Ng+ playthrough when learning this...
If you really want the deep dive, look into LFS (Linux from scratch), besides that I've always been the learning by doing kind of guy. Got a problem? Search a solution and read up on the intricacies of the problem
Yup that's probably what I meant. In that case idk. It's prbly still possible, but you might have to live reload the kernel, which is possible, but I guess there's a reason why basically no distro uses this feature
I've thought about trying that with my 7900xt, but never bothered actually doing it since everything I play runs on Linux. However I saw some posts about a project called something along the lines of pcie-passthrough-manager, that would be my starting point when trying that
git.
In all honesty, I'd just write a bash script, potentially reading from a file listing all the dotfiles you want to back up, copy them into some directory and pushing to a git repo. Run that script on a systemd timer (or manually) and write another script deploying them into the correct locations