The command you're looking for is tape archiver, cunningly called tar
.
Those kind hearted poms..
Also remember all the shit that they stole, the atrocities they committed, and (continues to) lie about, from all of their colonies.
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation has a TV and Radio documentary series called "Stuff The British Stole"
At one point, before we virtualised everything, I had a custom desk built in an L-shape. Instead of a desk and a return, I had the refurbishment team put together a desk with two desks instead. It gave me two sets of drawers, two computer cubby holes and the gap was too small for the horrible keyboard adjustable shelf that kept hitting your knees, so they replaced it with a fixed surface instead.
People laughed.
Colleagues sniggered.
Then they wanted one too.
Now I have a mobile lectern with an iMac clamped to it. Height adjustable, wheels, enough space for keyboard, trackpad and USB hub. I move around my office as the mood or light takes me.
You need to make an effort to put yourself in places where you can meet people. Often this takes the form of finding a community with a common interest. This could be a hobby, a lecture, a course, book club, gardening, etc.
Other places where you meet people can be a workplace, a volunteering effort, social gatherings like listening to a band, orchestra or a play.
You can go to the local coffee shop and spend time there watching people. If you do this regularly, you're likely to meet people whom you can talk to and interact with.
If you already know people, acquaintances, then organise or participate in activities with them.
Social media is an add-on to life, not life itself.
The way to make friends is essentially finding ways to interact with other humans, preferably in places where you like to enjoy yourself.
Wow, those comments are a dumpster fire.
Not sure what Derek 's best response might be. I'm thinking that this video will likely be taken down and replaced by one without a sponsor.
Do you really need to ask?
I mean, this is the guy who said: "The late, great Hannibal Lecter is a wonderful man”
Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/05/13/trump-hannibal-lecter-immigration/
It's right up there with random requirements to upload government photo id to suppliers in a different legal system. Hard Pass.
(I'm looking at you, PayPal, Airbnb and Stripe)
You can reduce the time there by making the water colder. You can also approach the experience as a sequence of steps and work out how you can wash every single part of your body in the least amount of steps.
For example, is it quicker to get all wet, turn off the shower, lather up your body, then rinse it all off in one go, or is it more efficient to do it from top to bottom, one body part at a time?
What's the fastest you've been able to go from sleeping to walking out the door having had a full shower?
Finally, you should probably have a shower once a day if you're around other people or if you get visitors. You might not smell anything, but they definitely will.
Finally, there's absolutely nothing wrong with zoning out in the shower. Some days you luxuriate in the experience, some days you don't.
Good luck!
This is not a new phenomenon.
Anyone remember "Turbo" or "DTP"?
Yes, there was a Turbo-mouse and a DTP-mouse.
I cannot believe just how much time I spent looking at this .. for .. science.
Generally laziness helps.
If you host a system, then you have to dedicate resources to maintaining it, which quickly escalates to lack of interest.
If you pay someone to host it, you get to spend your energy on things that you're interested in.
If you can find people to pay you for things that you're interested in, but they just want fixed, you have a business.
So, be conservative in what you host and frivolous in what you outsource.
Note that this says nothing about FOSS. since that's about a related but different concepts.
From a FOSS perspective, be frivolous (as in, do lots) in your bug reports and patches, be conservative in which projects you own.