Have you considered a wiki instead? I use OtterWiki and I like it a lot. It has version control using Git too.
There are several dozen different wiki softwares out there, you can compare their features using this site.
Have you considered a wiki instead? I use OtterWiki and I like it a lot. It has version control using Git too.
There are several dozen different wiki softwares out there, you can compare their features using this site.
Can you explain your opinion of the differences? A friend and I are interested in learning more about Discord alternatives that we can get our less tech-savvy friends to switch to.
Maybe make the cat indoor-only and save on vet bills. And save the animals in your neighborhood.
It’s a fact that cats hunt for fun in addition to sustenance. Since you presumably feed your cat, we can only assume that everything he attacks outdoors is for fun.
It’s pretty generic overall, but some parts of the worldbuilding are better than others. It fits together in fun ways, and the later stuff is better, but most of the early-game stuff is bland. Just FYI - I never beat it, but I played about 40 hours in 2015 and right now I’m about 10 hours into a replay.
I don’t know if it’s just because of the time since I’ve last played, but Re-Reckoning has felt like a lot more of a chore to play than the original. I don’t remember absolutely loving the original, though; it was always pretty mid, I just thought it was charming.
Removed by mod
Do what you want, its your experience that is ruined, not mine.
The fact that you believe there’s a single way to play a game is so fucking hilarious when stuff like speed-running and challenges exist. Oh well. Enjoy your purist bullshit.
If the opinion is “playing on easy means you don’t actually want to play,” I’m gonna give it the criticism it deserves.
Let me have my opinion. Why even leave your comment if you are pro-opinions?
Or maybe they just don’t have fast reflexes so easy is… easier. My wife almost never plays on normal because she can’t.
If she plays on normal, she will never finish the game and be so frustrated that it will cause her not to enjoy her evening. She works a lot and needs to de-stress when she gets home, so playing on easy is the best way for her.
Stop judging people. Just play your game and enjoy it.
I would recommend Kingdoms of Amalur: Re-Reckoning. The normal mode is already stupid easy, so you feel like a god on easy mode.
It’s a fantasy setting with a ton of story and lore, so if you don’t care about that it may not be for you.
Well, I don’t use a DE so your scenario of the new display not switching over right away is basically my life every time autorandr
decides not to run on startup.
Hmm, I tried it out after seeing this but I’m not really much of a fan of the mobile-first approach. I’ve moved on to HortusFox and it’s more what I was expecting.
My wife is the one who’ll be using it though, so we’ll see if she likes it.
Okay? My other comment might help you then, you can change in the preferences whether to put your library in nested folders or not.
If all else fails, make a post on the MobileRead forums; there are lots of nice and knowledgeable book people there with tons of Calibre experience.
I’m not trying to get you to do something you don’t want to, so your wall of text doesn’t really make sense to be directed at me. I didn’t make Calibre.
Hm, well, hopefully my other comment helps you then. I don’t think there’s an automated tool for this — though a shell script might do the trick, or at least get you most of the way, if you have basic scripting knowledge.
Open the Preferences in Calibre
Click on “Saving books to Disk” (found under Import/Export)
Make sure “Save cover separately,” “Update metadata in saved copies,” and “Save metadata in separate OPF file” are all unchecked.
Adjust the “Save template” to the filename format that you prefer. You can use variables as folder names so, for example, {author_sort}/{title}
would put everything by Stephen King in a folder titled “King, Stephen” and each book would be inside of a self-titled folder.
Select all of the books you want, then click the floppy disk icon and save them to a temporary directory.
Delete the old library, then import a new library (with the new filenames) from the temporary directory.
Delete the temporary directory.
Or you can just use symlinks. :P
Yeah, I know that, that’s why I picked it for her.
I found it really easy, but I was pretty familiar with the terminal on Windows. I started off with Debian in December and set up LMDE for my wife a few weeks ago and it was dead simple, though I do have to be her tech support since she’s not really a computer person.
I thought it would be a pain to install drivers and Steam and all that, but it wasn’t. I did give up on trying to set up my printer, but I’ll revisit that eventually.
I think, as a Linux beginner also (~10 months), the best way to learn the terminal is to figure out what tools are useful to you and then read the manual pages or [application name] --help
(if the application supports that command). Learning how to use grep
will also be really helpful for troubleshooting, since sifting through logs is such a pain.
Like if you want to download a YouTube video, install yt-dlp and then type man yt-dlp
into your terminal to learn about how that tool works. You can do this for basic utilities too, like cp
, dd
, mv
, etc. and other applications you have installed. You can also use yt-dlp --help
but that won’t open in the parser, just the terminal. Learn by doing things that are relevant to you and branch out from there.
There are also applications that will let you read the manual pages outside of a terminal, like xman
, if you find that useful. After a certain point, you’ll be able to write commands with switches/arguments without needing to check what they mean first.
Yeah! It lets me focus on content instead of building the actual site so I thought I would suggest it given OP’s use case.
Also the CSS can be modified with a separate file that overrides the default, so it’s pretty customizable without touching the actual config files at all.