What are you “here” with today?

Forum Forums New users Welcome to antiX What are you “here” with today?

  • This topic has 1,420 replies, 37 voices, and was last updated May 12-4:56 am by Trashthrasher.
Viewing 15 posts - 841 through 855 (of 1,421 total)
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  • #97448
    Forum Admin
    rokytnji
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      Enjoy the game. I am in my mc shop.

      harry@shop:~
      $ free -h
                     total        used        free      shared  buff/cache   available
      Mem:           3.6Gi       135Mi       1.9Gi        60Mi       1.5Gi       3.1Gi
      Swap:          3.9Gi          0B       3.9Gi
      

      Sometimes I drive a crooked road to get my mind straight.
      Not all who Wander are Lost.
      I'm not outa place. I'm from outer space.

      Linux Registered User # 475019
      How to Search for AntiX solutions to your problems

      #97450
      Moderator
      Brian Masinick
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        Is that your antiX honey Harry?

        AFC division winner Buffalo Bills won over the Dolphins, 34-31.

        I checked and there’s a LOT of technology used but the only thing mentioned with Linux was a joke from 20+ years ago!

        --
        Brian Masinick

        #97456
        Moderator
        Brian Masinick
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          free -h; pinxi -w;pinxi -b
                         total        used        free      shared  buff/cache   available
          Mem:           7.1Gi       1.1Gi       4.7Gi        11Mi       1.3Gi       5.8Gi
          Swap:          7.8Gi          0B       7.8Gi
          Weather:
            Report: temperature: 6.54 C (44 F) conditions: clear sky
            Locale: Greenville, SC, USA current time: Sun 15 Jan 2023 06:43:02 PM EST
              (America/New_York) Source: OpenWeatherMap.org
          System:
            Host: brian-antix-hp-14fq1025nr Kernel: 6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1 arch: x86_64
              bits: 64 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.0 Distro: antiX-21-runit_x64-full Grup Yorum
              30 October 2021
          Machine:
            Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
              serial: <superuser required>
            Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
              v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
          Battery:
            ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
          CPU:
            Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
              avg: 1876 min/max: 1400/4056
          Graphics:
            Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
            Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
            Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 1.20.11 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
              unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
              resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
            API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 20.3.5 renderer: AMD RENOIR (DRM 3.49.0
              6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1 LLVM 11.0.1)
          Network:
            Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
          Drives:
            Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 29.27 GiB (12.3%)
          Info:
            Processes: 284 Uptime: 22m Memory: 7.11 GiB used: 1.36 GiB (19.1%)
            Shell: Bash pinxi: 3.3.24-4

          --
          Brian Masinick

          #97457
          Moderator
          Brian Masinick
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            ur
            [sudo] password for masinick: 
            Reading package lists... Done
            Building dependency tree... Done
            Reading state information... Done
            The following packages will be REMOVED:
              linux-headers-6.1.0-6.1-liquorix-amd64 linux-image-6.1.0-6.1-liquorix-amd64
            0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 2 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
            After this operation, 227 MB disk space will be freed.
            Do you want to continue? [Y/n] 
            (Reading database ... 250746 files and directories currently installed.)
            Removing linux-headers-6.1.0-6.1-liquorix-amd64 (6.1-12.1~bullseye) ...
            Removing linux-image-6.1.0-6.1-liquorix-amd64 (6.1-12.1~bullseye) ...
            I: /vmlinuz.old is now a symlink to boot/vmlinuz-6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1
            I: /initrd.img.old is now a symlink to boot/initrd.img-6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1
            /etc/kernel/postrm.d/initramfs-tools:
            update-initramfs: Deleting /boot/initrd.img-6.1.0-6.1-liquorix-amd64
            /etc/kernel/postrm.d/zz-update-grub:
            Generating grub configuration file ...
            Found background: /usr/share/wallpaper/grub/back.png
            Found background image: /usr/share/wallpaper/grub/back.png
            Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1
            Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1
            Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-6.1.4-x64v3-xanmod1
            Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-6.1.4-x64v3-xanmod1
            Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-6.1.0-6.3-liquorix-amd64
            Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-6.1.0-6.3-liquorix-amd64
            Found memtest86+ image: /boot/memtest86+.bin
            Warning: os-prober will be executed to detect other bootable partitions.
            Its output will be used to detect bootable binaries on them and create new boot entries.
            Found PCLinuxOS on /dev/nvme0n1p4
            Found openSUSE Tumbleweed on /dev/nvme0n1p5
            Found Debian GNU/Linux bookworm/sid on /dev/nvme0n1p7
            Found EndeavourOS Linux (rolling) on /dev/nvme0n1p8
            Adding boot menu entry for UEFI Firmware Settings ...
            done
            [brian-antix-hp-14fq1025nr]/home/masinick: > alias ur
            alias ur='sudo apt-get autoremove'

            --
            Brian Masinick

            #97458
            Moderator
            Brian Masinick
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              Now HERE’S an example of a “bonehead command” I issued; I was looking for alias commands starting with u, but as you can “see” I wrote something incorrectly in my command.

              This ought to be an easy one; what was my mistake?

              alias | grep u*
              alias R='repl -cc all -filter ~/.mhfilter'
              alias aa='apt autoremove'
              alias ac='apt clean'
              alias ad='apt dist-upgrade -V'
              alias ag='apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade'
              alias aga='apt-get autoremove'
              alias agc='apt-get clean'
              alias agd='apt-get dist-upgrade'
              alias agu='apt-get update'
              alias au='apt update'
              alias aud='apt update && apt dist-upgrade -V'
              alias b='cd ~/bin'
              alias bye='clear; kill -1 0'
              alias c='clear;pwd'
              alias cd='g'
              alias cls='clear'
              alias copy='cp'
              alias del='rm -i'
              alias dir='ls -aqFC'
              alias e='emacs'
              alias ga='ping -c2 google.com'
              alias h='fc -l'
              alias help='apropos'
              alias home='cd'
              alias host='hostname'
              alias inst='sudo apt-get update; sudo apt-get install $@'
              alias kh='exec /usr/bin/ksh'
              alias l='ls -aqCF'
              alias ll='ls -l'
              alias lo='clear;  kill -1 0'
              alias lpi='lpr  -K2 -N1'
              alias lsd='ls -algFqd'
              alias lsf='ls -F'
              alias lsi='ls -algFqi'
              alias lsl='ls -algFq'
              alias lsr='ls -aqCFR'
              alias lst='ls -algsFqt'
              alias lst10='lst | head -10'
              alias lst20='lst | head -20'
              alias lst30='lst | head -30'
              alias lst40='lst | head -40'
              alias lst50='lst | head -50'
              alias lst60='lst | head -60'
              alias lst70='lst | head -70'
              alias m='more'
              alias n='$HOME/bin/null.bash $@'
              alias null='$HOME/bin/null.bash $@'
              alias pd='pwd'
              alias pdw='pwd'
              alias pow='sudo poweroff'
              alias rb='sudo reboot'
              alias re='fc -e -'
              alias rw='rwho | sort +1'
              alias sd='cd'
              alias type='cat'
              alias ug='sudo apt-get update; sudo apt-get dist-upgrade'
              alias ugb='sudo apt-get update; sudo apt-get dist-upgrade; sudo update-grub'
              alias ur='sudo apt-get autoremove'
              alias wpd='pwd'
              alias ya='ping -c2 yahoo.com'
              alias zaphist='rm -f /home/masinick/.bwm_history'
              • This reply was modified 3 months, 3 weeks ago by Brian Masinick.

              --
              Brian Masinick

              #97460
              Moderator
              Brian Masinick
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                This is certainly more what I was looking for, but what about YOUR expertise? Do you have even better commands to show all of your alias commands that begin with the letter u?

                alias | grep "alias u"
                alias ug='sudo apt-get update; sudo apt-get dist-upgrade'
                alias ugb='sudo apt-get update; sudo apt-get dist-upgrade; sudo update-grub'
                alias ur='sudo apt-get autoremove'

                --
                Brian Masinick

                #97527
                Member
                mrpieceofwork
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                  I finally did it!!!

                  No more Windows BSODs! (I’m going to see how long I can keep this 1st session running lol)

                  Installed AntiX to disk… now running from said install. (had another glitch with the live… so I decided to go for it)

                  System:
                  Kernel: 4.9.0-326-antix.1-486-smp arch: i686 bits: 32 compiler: gcc v: 10.2.1
                  parameters: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-4.9.0-326-antix.1-486-smp
                  root=UUID=3e4e0c82-42c9-4bda-98ac-605ee3ec1c0f ro quiet
                  Desktop: IceWM v: 3.0.1 dm: slimski v: 1.5.0
                  Distro: antiX-22_386-full Grup Yorum 18 October 2022 base: Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)
                  Machine:
                  Type: Laptop System: Hewlett-Packard product: HP Pavilion dv6000 (RP301UA#ABA) v: Rev 1
                  serial: <superuser required> Chassis: Quanta type: 10 serial: <superuser required>
                  Mobo: Quanta model: 30BB v: 66.36 serial: <superuser required> BIOS: Hewlett-Packard v: F.13
                  date: 01/02/2007
                  Battery:
                  ID-1: BAT0 charge: 100% condition: N/A/88.8 Wh volts: 8.2 min: 14.8
                  model: Hewlett-Packard Primary type: Li-ion serial: N/A status: charging
                  Memory:
                  RAM: total: 990.7 MiB used: 719 MiB (72.6%)
                  RAM Report: permissions: Unable to run dmidecode. Root privileges required.
                  PCI Slots:
                  Permissions: Unable to run dmidecode. Root privileges required.
                  CPU:
                  Info: model: Intel Core2 T5200 bits: 32 type: MCP arch: Core2 Merom built: 2006-09
                  process: Intel 65nm family: 6 model-id: 0xF (15) stepping: 6 microcode: 0xD1
                  Topology: cpus: 1x cores: 2 smt: <unsupported> cache: L1: 128 KiB desc: d-2×32 KiB; i-2×32 KiB
                  L2: 2 MiB desc: 1×2 MiB
                  Speed (MHz): avg: 1200 high: 1333 min/max: 800/1600 scaling: driver: acpi-cpufreq
                  governor: ondemand cores: 1: 1067 2: 1333 bogomips: 6385
                  Flags: acpi aperfmperf apic arch_perfmon bts clflush cmov constant_tsc cx16 cx8 de ds_cpl
                  dtes64 dtherm dts est fpu fxsr ht lahf_lm lm mca mce mmx monitor msr mtrr nx pae pat pbe pdcm
                  pebs pge pni pse pse36 sep ss sse sse2 ssse3 tm tm2 tsc vme xtpr
                  Vulnerabilities:
                  Type: itlb_multihit status: KVM: Vulnerable
                  Type: l1tf status: Vulnerable
                  Type: mds status: Vulnerable: Clear CPU buffers attempted, no microcode; SMT disabled
                  Type: meltdown status: Vulnerable
                  Type: mmio_stale_data status: Not affected
                  Type: spec_store_bypass status: Vulnerable
                  Type: spectre_v1 mitigation: usercopy/swapgs barriers and __user pointer sanitization
                  Type: spectre_v2 mitigation: Retpolines, STIBP: disabled, RSB filling
                  Type: srbds status: Not affected
                  Type: tsx_async_abort status: Not affected
                  Graphics:
                  Device-1: Intel Mobile 945GM/GMS 943/940GML Express Integrated Graphics vendor: Hewlett-Packard
                  driver: i915 v: kernel arch: Gen3.5 process: Intel 90nm built: 2005-06 ports: active: LVDS-1
                  empty: SVIDEO-1,VGA-1 bus-ID: 00:02.0 chip-ID: 8086:27a2 class-ID: 0300
                  Device-2: Ricoh Pavilion Webcam [R5U870] type: USB driver: N/A bus-ID: 1-4:3
                  chip-ID: 05ca:1810 class-ID: 0e02
                  Display: server: X.Org v: 1.20.11 driver: X: loaded: intel unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa
                  gpu: i915 display-ID: :0.0 screens: 1
                  Screen-1: 0 s-res: 1280×800 s-dpi: 96 s-size: 338x211mm (13.31×8.31″) s-diag: 398mm (15.69″)
                  Monitor-1: LVDS-1 mapped: LVDS1 model: AU Optronics 0x2174 built: 2005 res: 1280×800 hz: 60
                  dpi: 99 gamma: 1.2 chroma: red: x: 0.592 y: 0.345 green: x: 0.314 y: 0.557 blue: x: 0.153
                  y: 0.153 white: x: 0.314 y: 0.329 size: 330x210mm (12.99×8.27″) diag: 390mm (15.4″)
                  ratio: 16:10 modes: 1280×800
                  OpenGL: renderer: Mesa DRI Intel 945GM x86/MMX/SSE2 v: 1.4 Mesa 20.3.5 direct render: Yes
                  Audio:
                  Device-1: Intel NM10/ICH7 Family High Definition Audio vendor: Hewlett-Packard
                  driver: snd_hda_intel v: kernel bus-ID: 00:1b.0 chip-ID: 8086:27d8 class-ID: 0403
                  Sound Server-1: ALSA v: k4.9.0-326-antix.1-486-smp running: yes
                  Network:
                  Device-1: Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABG [Golan] Network vendor: Hewlett-Packard driver: iwl3945
                  v: in-tree:s modules: wl bus-ID: 02:00.0 chip-ID: 8086:4222 class-ID: 0280
                  IF: wlan0 state: up mac: <filter>
                  IP v4: <filter> scope: global broadcast: <filter>
                  IP v6: <filter> scope: global
                  IP v6: <filter> type: dynamic mngtmpaddr scope: global
                  IP v6: <filter> scope: link
                  Device-2: Intel PRO/100 VE Network vendor: Hewlett-Packard driver: e100 v: 3.5.24-k2-NAPI
                  port: 4000 bus-ID: 05:08.0 chip-ID: 8086:1092 class-ID: 0200
                  IF: eth0 state: down mac: <filter>
                  WAN IP: <filter>
                  Bluetooth:
                  Message: No bluetooth data found.
                  Logical:
                  Message: No logical block device data found.
                  RAID:
                  Message: No RAID data found.
                  Drives:
                  Local Storage: total: 119.06 GiB used: 6.84 GiB (5.7%)
                  SMART Message: Unable to run smartctl. Root privileges required.
                  ID-1: /dev/sda maj-min: 8:0 vendor: Fujitsu model: MHV2120BH PL size: 111.79 GiB block-size:
                  physical: 512 B logical: 512 B speed: 1.5 Gb/s type: N/A serial: <filter> rev: 892C scheme: MBR
                  ID-2: /dev/sdb maj-min: 8:16 type: USB vendor: Kingston model: DataTraveler 2.0 size: 7.27 GiB
                  block-size: physical: 512 B logical: 512 B type: N/A serial: <filter> rev: PMAP scheme: MBR
                  SMART Message: Unknown USB bridge. Flash drive/Unsupported enclosure?
                  Optical-1: /dev/sr0 vendor: Slimtype model: DVD A DS8AZH rev: NH61
                  dev-links: cdrom,cdrw,dvd,dvdrw
                  Features: speed: 24 multisession: yes audio: yes dvd: yes rw: cd-r,cd-rw,dvd-r,dvd-ram
                  state: running
                  Partition:
                  ID-1: / raw-size: 24.26 GiB size: 23.71 GiB (97.74%) used: 3.6 GiB (15.2%) fs: ext4
                  dev: /dev/sda1 maj-min: 8:1 label: rootantiX22 uuid: 3e4e0c82-42c9-4bda-98ac-605ee3ec1c0f
                  ID-2: /home raw-size: 86.02 GiB size: 84.11 GiB (97.78%) used: 273 MiB (0.3%) fs: ext4
                  dev: /dev/sda3 maj-min: 8:3 label: homeantiX uuid: d645eee6-6227-4b5c-a518-973567562ba4
                  ID-3: /media/mrpieceofwork/ANTIX-LIVE raw-size: 7.27 GiB size: 7.25 GiB (99.78%)
                  used: 2.97 GiB (41.0%) fs: vfat dev: /dev/sdb1 maj-min: 8:17 label: ANTIX-LIVE uuid: 828D-5767
                  Swap:
                  Kernel: swappiness: 10 (default 60) cache-pressure: 50 (default 100)
                  ID-1: swap-1 type: partition size: 1.5 GiB used: 1.5 MiB (0.1%) priority: -1 dev: /dev/sda2
                  maj-min: 8:2 label: swapantiX uuid: 7367d6c7-f63b-4dae-b1e2-a33ea25d5238
                  Unmounted:
                  Message: No unmounted partitions found.
                  USB:
                  Hub-1: 1-0:1 info: Full speed or root hub ports: 8 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0002
                  class-ID: 0900
                  Device-1: 1-3:2
                  info: Toshiba Kingston DataTraveler 102/2.0 / HEMA Flash Drive 2 GB PNY Attache 4GB Stick
                  type: Mass Storage driver: usb-storage interfaces: 1 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s power: 200mA
                  chip-ID: 0930:6545 class-ID: 0806 serial: <filter>
                  Device-2: 1-4:3 info: Ricoh Pavilion Webcam [R5U870] type: Video driver: N/A interfaces: 2
                  rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s power: 100mA chip-ID: 05ca:1810 class-ID: 0e02
                  Hub-2: 2-0:1 info: Full speed or root hub ports: 2 rev: 1.1 speed: 12 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0001
                  class-ID: 0900
                  Hub-3: 3-0:1 info: Full speed or root hub ports: 2 rev: 1.1 speed: 12 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0001
                  class-ID: 0900
                  Hub-4: 4-0:1 info: Full speed or root hub ports: 2 rev: 1.1 speed: 12 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0001
                  class-ID: 0900
                  Hub-5: 5-0:1 info: Full speed or root hub ports: 2 rev: 1.1 speed: 12 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0001
                  class-ID: 0900
                  Sensors:
                  System Temperatures: cpu: 62.0 C mobo: N/A
                  Fan Speeds (RPM): N/A
                  Repos:
                  Packages: apt: 1563 lib: 738
                  Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/antix.list
                  1: deb http: //mirrors.rit.edu/mxlinux/mx-packages/antix/bullseye bullseye main nosystemd nonfree
                  Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/bullseye-backports.list
                  1: deb http: //deb.debian.org/debian bullseye-backports main contrib non-free
                  Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian-stable-updates.list
                  1: deb http: //ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ bullseye-updates main contrib non-free
                  Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian.list
                  1: deb http: //ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ bullseye main contrib non-free
                  2: deb http: //security.debian.org/ bullseye-security main contrib non-free
                  No active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/various.list
                  Processes:
                  CPU top: 5 of 169
                  1: cpu: 34.3% command: firefox-esr pid: 8182 mem: 414.2 MiB (41.8%)
                  2: cpu: 19.5% command: yad pid: 14454 mem: 26.1 MiB (2.6%)
                  3: cpu: 11.8% command: firefox-esr pid: 8579 mem: 120.6 MiB (12.1%)
                  4: cpu: 3.5% command: firefox-esr pid: 8480 mem: 137.0 MiB (13.8%)
                  5: cpu: 3.3% command: xorg pid: 2055 mem: 39.5 MiB (3.9%)
                  Memory top: 5 of 169
                  1: mem: 414.2 MiB (41.8%) command: firefox-esr pid: 8182 cpu: 34.3%
                  2: mem: 137.0 MiB (13.8%) command: firefox-esr pid: 8480 cpu: 3.5%
                  3: mem: 120.6 MiB (12.1%) command: firefox-esr pid: 8579 cpu: 11.8%
                  4: mem: 101.1 MiB (10.2%) command: firefox-esr pid: 8271 cpu: 0.7%
                  5: mem: 97.6 MiB (9.8%) command: firefox-esr pid: 8462 cpu: 0.1%
                  Info:
                  Processes: 169 Uptime: 28m wakeups: 2 Init: SysVinit v: 2.96 runlevel: 5 default: 5
                  tool: service Compilers: gcc: 10.2.1 alt: 10 Client: shell wrapper v: 5.1.4-release inxi: 3.3.19

                  #97528
                  Moderator
                  Brian Masinick
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                    Robin recently shared an update; here is a small snip that shows how long that system had been up (nearly 22 days!)

                    Info:
                      Processes: 233 Uptime: 21d 18h 50m wakeups: 2883 Init: SysVinit v: 2.96
                      runlevel: 5 default: 5 tool: service Compilers: gcc: 10.2.1 alt: 10
                      Shell: Bash (sudo) v: 5.1.4 running-in: roxterm inxi: 3.3.19

                    --
                    Brian Masinick

                    #97529
                    Moderator
                    Brian Masinick
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                      ::

                      h2 shows us just how long a good system can stay up – how about over three months!

                      Info:
                        Processes: 657 Uptime: 99d 7h 4m Memory: 31.34 GiB used: 23.32 GiB (74.4%)
                        Init: systemd target: graphical (5) Compilers: gcc: 11.2.0 Packages: 3486
                        Shell: Bash v: 5.1.16 pinxi: 3.3.16-29

                      I worked in a few places where equipment would literally stay up the entire time of a release cycle, software update or hardware refresh; a few of them stayed up for over a year easily!

                      --
                      Brian Masinick

                      #97530
                      Moderator
                      Brian Masinick
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                        Here is my latest update –

                        pinxi -b
                        System:
                          Host: brian-antix-hp-14fq1025nr Kernel: 6.1.0-6.3-liquorix-amd64
                            arch: x86_64 bits: 64 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.0 Distro: antiX-21-runit_x64-full
                            Grup Yorum 30 October 2021
                        Machine:
                          Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
                            serial: <superuser required>
                          Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
                            v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
                        Battery:
                          ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
                        CPU:
                          Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
                            avg: 2210 min/max: 1400/4056
                        Graphics:
                          Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
                          Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
                          Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 1.20.11 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
                            unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
                            resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
                          API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 20.3.5 renderer: AMD RENOIR (DRM 3.49.0
                            6.1.0-6.3-liquorix-amd64 LLVM 11.0.1)
                        Network:
                          Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
                        Drives:
                          Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 28.98 GiB (12.2%)
                        Info:
                          Processes: 234 Uptime: 27m Memory: 7.1 GiB used: 920.9 MiB (12.7%)
                          Shell: Bash pinxi: 3.3.24-5

                        --
                        Brian Masinick

                        #97531
                        Member
                        andyprough
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                          Enjoy the game. I am in my mc shop.

                          Looks like you’ve found the new wallpaper for antiX 23 – no need to do a poll or anything.

                          Also a new motto – ‘light & sexy’ beats ‘lean & mean’.

                          #97533
                          Moderator
                          Brian Masinick
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                            ::

                            Enjoy the game. I am in my mc shop.

                            Looks like you’ve found the new wallpaper for antiX 23 – no need to do a poll or anything.

                            Also a new motto – ‘light & sexy’ beats ‘lean & mean’.

                            This wallpaper and many others are NOT new to rokytnji. We’ve seen similar art and wallpaper for at least a decade, probably longer than that. My friend said as much in the post.

                            --
                            Brian Masinick

                            #97578
                            Moderator
                            Brian Masinick
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                              Tuesday afternoon, January 17, 2023: Firefox has released their Version 109.0 release, and their Development (Beta) and Nightly versions are now updating in preparation for the next release. I already updated my personal copy of Firefox Release to Version 109.0, and I’m now running the updated Development release at Version 110.0b1. There are nine development and beta releases; this is the first one.

                              As far as my information updates, here is the update after running a while

                              pinxi -v4
                              System:
                                Host: brian-antix-hp-14fq1025nr Kernel: 6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1 arch: x86_64
                                  bits: 64 compiler: gcc v: 12.2.0 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.0
                                  Distro: antiX-21-runit_x64-full Grup Yorum 30 October 2021 base: Debian
                                  GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)
                              Machine:
                                Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
                                  serial: <superuser required>
                                Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
                                  v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
                              Battery:
                                ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
                                  volts: 12.7 min: 11.3 model: HP Primary status: not charging
                              CPU:
                                Info: 6-core model: AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics bits: 64
                                  type: MT MCP arch: Zen 2 rev: 1 cache: L1: 384 KiB L2: 3 MiB L3: 8 MiB
                                Speed (MHz): avg: 2051 high: 2100 min/max: 1400/4056 boost: enabled cores:
                                  1: 2100 2: 2100 3: 2100 4: 2100 5: 2100 6: 2100 7: 2100 8: 2100 9: 1984
                                  10: 2100 11: 2100 12: 1635 bogomips: 50307
                                Flags: avx avx2 ht lm nx pae sse sse2 sse3 sse4_1 sse4_2 sse4a ssse3 svm
                              Graphics:
                                Device-1: AMD Lucienne vendor: Hewlett-Packard driver: amdgpu v: kernel
                                  arch: GCN-5 bus-ID: 03:00.0 temp: 45.0 C
                                Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
                                  bus-ID: 1-3:3
                                Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 1.20.11 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
                                  unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
                                  resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
                                API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 20.3.5 renderer: AMD RENOIR (DRM 3.49.0
                                  6.1.5-x64v3-xanmod1 LLVM 11.0.1) direct-render: Yes
                              Network:
                                Device-1: Realtek vendor: Hewlett-Packard driver: rtw89_8852ae v: kernel
                                  port: f000 bus-ID: 01:00.0
                                IF: wlan0 state: up mac: d8:80:83:b7:f8:bd
                              Drives:
                                Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 29.36 GiB (12.3%)
                                ID-1: /dev/nvme0n1 vendor: Toshiba model: KBG40ZNV256G KIOXIA
                                  size: 238.47 GiB temp: 28.9 C
                              Partition:
                                ID-1: / size: 47.76 GiB used: 29.32 GiB (61.4%) fs: ext4 dev: /dev/nvme0n1p3
                                ID-2: /boot/efi size: 256 MiB used: 42.4 MiB (16.5%) fs: vfat
                                  dev: /dev/nvme0n1p1
                                ID-3: swap-1 size: 7.81 GiB used: 0 KiB (0.0%) fs: swap
                                  dev: /dev/nvme0n1p6
                              Info:
                                Processes: 278 Uptime: 45m Memory: 7.11 GiB used: 1.44 GiB (20.2%)
                                Init: runit runlevel: 2 Compilers: gcc: 10.2.1 Packages: 1816 Shell: Bash
                                v: 5.1.4 pinxi: 3.3.24-5

                              --
                              Brian Masinick

                              #97586
                              Moderator
                              Brian Masinick
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                                Several people have been discussing various web browsers that can be used on aging equipment and a few people have recently compiled their web browsers to avoid using new generation libraries that won’t work on their old equipment.

                                My stuff, even the oldest equipment, isn’t really old enough to worry about such things, but even on newer equipment, sometimes I just want to run a modern but efficient web browser.

                                Most of the time I use either the released, development or nightly version of Firefox. Any of these work fine for nearly any workload and I have configured my toolbar icons to invoke them with apulse on antiX so that I can use them with multimedia. If I don’t need them in that manner I can also run them directly.

                                But sometimes I just don’t need much. Netsurf seemed like a potentially good thing for such a need and it’s definitely efficient, but the consequence is that routine clicks in webmail or this forum are NOT routine with netsurf, at least not for me.

                                So I went back to two other browsers that are plenty light for my needs, yet capable for the majority of routine browsing. They are Palemoon and SeaMonkey.

                                Both do the job without fanfare and they are reasonable in their resource usage.
                                I have a lot of experience with the original Netscape, the Mozilla browser that replaced Netscape and the eventual replacement for Mozilla – Seamonkey. I’m finding that a SeaMonkey interface is perfect for forums like ours and for reading webmail.

                                --
                                Brian Masinick

                                #97599
                                Member
                                andyprough
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                                  So I went back to two other browsers that are plenty light for my needs, yet capable for the majority of routine browsing. They are Palemoon and SeaMonkey.

                                  Both do the job without fanfare and they are reasonable in their resource usage.
                                  I have a lot of experience with the original Netscape, the Mozilla browser that replaced Netscape and the eventual replacement for Mozilla – Seamonkey. I’m finding that a SeaMonkey interface is perfect for forums like ours and for reading webmail.

                                  I agree Brian, as we’ve noted recently you’ll get pretty good web page rendering and much lower memory usage with either Pale Moon or Seamonkey.

                                  There are some websites that don’t work right with those browsers, such as some functions on github. For some of the misbehaving websites there is an extension called Palefill that fixes the missing google webcomponents features to allow those sites to run. You may want to consider installing it on both Pale Moon and Seamonkey in order to ensure the best possible browsing experience: https://martok.github.io/palefill/

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