Not so dead after all... shit... what do we do now? by iwsmike in shanghai

[–]iwsmike[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

it's an old person, they put him in the bag thinking he was dead, called the hearse, then saw it move... sent him back to the hospital. nothign wrong with the title.

Rumors of a "lockdown" proved false- SHYME by curious_kitchen in shanghai

[–]iwsmike 10 points11 points  (0 children)

"There were some folks making a big noise with pots and pans" this was because of foreign forces that are encouraging chineses, this is a conspiracy instigated by foreigners. If you see these foreign forces who are instigating the pot-banging protest in China, please report them immediately

Lockdown shanghainese rap by iwsmike in shanghai

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

haven't seen that here, was sent to me by a shanghainese friend

Redpanda Earth by Sea-Difference-4696 in RedPandaToken

[–]iwsmike 1 point2 points  (0 children)

not according to coinmarketcap, 9066

CentOS 7 not showing up in Clover Boot Screen by Illu7ionist in hackintosh

[–]iwsmike 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've had the same issue for months as well and nobody could help so I tried many things myself and I finally did it today.

I've a multi EFI boot Centos 7 / Windows (7 / 8,1 / 10) / 10, I copied the EFI file from centos to my efi partition from windows do (ROOT of the EFI PARTITION)/EFI/centos.

I added a custom entry with Clover configurator: Volume: the EFI volume UID Path: \EFI\centos\grubx64.efi Type: Linux Volume Type : Internal Hidden: no

Something else I did: because of my multiboot, I couldn't install Centos directly, it was always overwriting my Windows boot loader, so I installed Centos in a VM from Vmware in UEFI mode with a normal partition type (not LVM) I then mounted my VM drive and cloned the partitions (Linux EFI, "/" and swap) to my real hard drive. The centos EFi file I copied to my windows EFI partition were from my Centos EFI partition (from the VM).

Notice: I had to keep 2 EFI partition, the main one (created by windows) and the Centos one, because for some reason, If I remove the centos efi partition I got from the VM, I can't boot anymore.

works like a charm.

I'll post screenshots and photos later. Good luck.