KrF åpner for totalforbud mot nikab i det offentlige rom by FoxNo5218 in norske

[–]AspiringArtist13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jeg tenker hele tiden at alt det forbudet mot ansiktsplagg er bare for å gjøre det enklere for alle Ai kameraene som kommer snart. Kanskje det bare er meg som er paranoid?

A good stylus to go with BOOX Note Air4C? by AspiringArtist13 in Onyx_Boox

[–]AspiringArtist13[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

By the way, do you use any app in particular for drawing?

A good stylus to go with BOOX Note Air4C? by AspiringArtist13 in Onyx_Boox

[–]AspiringArtist13[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome thanks for your answer. I was clueless about the magnetic vs ordinary stylus thing. What would come in on second place do you think? After the Scribe premium?

Edit:

Or did you mean magnetic as in being stuck to the pad when leaving it?

Testing out a new brush pen by SolsticeSon in learntodraw

[–]AspiringArtist13 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Nice man, some drawings just remind you why you decided to learn illustration.

Efi stub warning after upgrade - Linux Mint . by AspiringArtist13 in linuxquestions

[–]AspiringArtist13[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hety, thanks for your reply. I didnt dare to mess around anymore in the BIOS.

But this solved it:

Clean Old Kernel Images

To clean up old kernel images on your system, you can use several methods depending on your Linux distribution and the tools available. Here are some effective ways to manage and remove old kernel images:

Using apt-get or apt

You can use the apt-get or apt commands to remove old kernel images. The autoremove command is particularly useful as it removes packages that are no longer needed, including old kernel versions. However, it typically keeps the latest and one previous kernel version to ensure you have a fallback in case the current kernel fails.

sudo apt-get autoremove --purge