

ollam runs on the 6700 XT, but you need to add an environment variable for it to work… I just don’t remember what it was and am away from my computer right now
ollam runs on the 6700 XT, but you need to add an environment variable for it to work… I just don’t remember what it was and am away from my computer right now
chsh does not modify /bin/sh
Maybe you’re thinking of a certain video from a certain YouTuber who linked /bin/sh to fish?
That’s… all stow does, there’s nothing more to it. If you need some other feature don’t waste your time trying to make it work with stow, It’s just a meme in my opinion.
About the “package manager” functionality, stow was originally supposed to be a development tool for the Perl programming language, you download a bunch of libraries into a directory, then use stow to merge those files into the root of your project (like a caveman), as it turned out some people started using it to manage dotfiles, and here we are.
When I started trying to organize my dotfiles, I started with stow, but quickly found it very limited.
After that I found dotdrop, which is considerably more involved, but gives you total control. My config with dotdrop quickly started growing insanely huge, at some point I even had system-wide systemd services declared.
Then I found out I was basically reinventing nixos and home-manager, so I switched to that.
The only thing I know about SELinux is that the NSA made it, and that you need to add :z to docker volumes to fix permissions.