So to check what suspend states your laptop supports run cat /sys/power/mem_sleep
. It should print something like s2idle shallow [deep]
with the option that is enabled having [] around it. To change the enabled option run echo "s2idle" > /sys/power/mem_sleep
.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Power_management/Suspend_and_hibernate has more info.
Many modern laptops no longer support S3 sleep at all. It is likely to be an issue with the bios rather than a linux project. On my laptop, with Ryzen 7 5825U, I had to give up on S3 and use s2idle. Also had to pass "pcie_aspm=off" as a kernel parameter because it would take ages to wake the ssd without it. Overall works ok. Not as good as S3 but better than nothing.
It is probably possible however currently I can go to kbin.social/d/9to5mac.com and see all the posts that link to 9to5mac so them hosting their own instance would be kinda redundant.
Musky boi changed twitters name to x.
Yep on kbin you can subscribe/block domains so anything from that domain will show up in your feed. This works for instance domains and general websites that people link to as well. Its good if you want to block whole instances rather than asking the admin to defederate.
I've been using neo launcher. Definitely not as feature rich as nova but it fulfills my wanta.
Doesn't fdroid automatically check for updates already?
I have something similar but without the discover weekly and lastFM. Awesome idea. Guess that'll be this weeks project.
I usually end up with community playing in the background while I'm working on something else. No idea how many times I've rewatched it.
Only when a link brings me there or though a ddg search. No more browsing.
Maybe they're just mice trying to find the question to life the universe and everything.
I haven't really noticed much of a difference. I figured it was probably worth actually being able to wake the laptop from sleep rather than having to restart it every time.