Sure, but that’s not in their answer.
Sure, but that’s not in their answer.
only drawback is that it doesn’t create differential backups
This is a big drawback because even if you don’t need to keep old versions of files, you could be replicating silent disk corruption to your backup.
Sounds legit, thank you.
Thanks, Dr. Dystopia.
Fun fact: this feature used to be built-in to Firefox itself.
Yeah. I found that post after I, too, was banned.
Relevant discussion: !Linuxsucks@lemmy.world mod silently bans people from their community for disagreeing, and tries to hide the comments from being seen in the modlog.
I think you might be looking for something like OpenSnitch.
Whose entire life was in a… what?
Possibly my light/dark mode scripts. They change my Plasma theme, which is honestly most of the job, but also set the matching GTK theme, set the new theme in running Konsole sessions, do a bunch of manual sed
edits on conf files for applications that don’t follow system theming, finally restarting plasmashell
to clean up the occasional edge case where a tray icon is supposed to follow the theme but doesn’t.
It’s not for everyone, but if “collection of perl scripts” sounds like your jam, GnuPod still works for a CLI option.
I don’t think these things are universal across software, but you can often put -f
on its own, separate from other flags, or get in the habit of using the long --force
flag.
Too many options to remember and look up every time
This is a good use case for shell aliases. If you can identify a few of your use cases, you can give each bundle of options its own command.
Ctrl+F’d for this.
I’m not sure if you can show/hide like that, but as a workaround you can toggle auto-hiding with a qdbus command, and set a keyboard shortcut to run that.
I think OP said
if a window is fullscreen
as opposed to simply being maximized.
AlternativeTo lists open source alternatives to AlternativeTo.
My one and only purpose was to warn them that their “drawback” is more of a gator pit. It’s noble that you’re here defending rsync’s honor, but maybe let them know instead? My preferred backup tool has “don’t eat my data” mode on by default.