I live in SE NC. Duke energy has incentives for solar and they are about to pay for the installation of my Tesla charger in my garage… It’s not all bad I guess…
I live in SE NC. Duke energy has incentives for solar and they are about to pay for the installation of my Tesla charger in my garage… It’s not all bad I guess…
I can’t be the only one who has noticed the uptick in the negative EV press lately. Is this the same death throws akin to the buggy whip lobby of yore?
Edit* price needs to be attainable for the many for sure… but the amount of negative press is “sus” (as the kids say)
Probably boils down to the arch ethos of K.I.S.S. not making too many decisions for you.
The archlinux-keyring package holds they gpg signatures used for signing the packages and if you go too long between upgrades it’s possible you won’t have a signature or an outdated one and a normal -syu will fail because of it. So I just upgrade keyring first and it gets ahead of that issue.
I have an alias in bashrc called upgrade. It runs reflector looking for the fastest of the newest 10 near me. Then it upgrades the keyring, then yay -syu and then paccache -r.
I have the journal limited to 100mb so I don’t ever bother cleaning house on that.
I probably don’t review pacman logs as often as I should, but stuff rarely breaks and is normally pretty easy for me to figure out what when it does.
Have an upvote my fellow fedinaut
I lived in those apartments from 2005-2007. Had never heard of the movie until a neighbor friend said “hey check this out”…
Great movie, very well done… But it’s disturbing as fuck.
Thanks for bringing that memory back up…
Upbeans and downbeans…
For me that’s usually after I had a few adult beverages the night before and my internal filters took a vacation. I either pissed a bunch of people off or said something funny for once.
Knowing what AUR pkg would help, but here is where I would look.
Systemctrl disable tab tab to get a list of what is enabled to start at boot for services and such. Disable what you don’t want.
I use gnome, so I’d check ~/.config/autostart if it’s an application that’s starting when I login.