Ram and sata cable faults have similar symptons as well.
Ram and sata cable faults have similar symptons as well.
I use wallabag. There is paid hosted version, but you can install it on your server. You can tag, star and mark read/unread your bookmarks. There is a webapp, browser extensions, mobile apps for all platforms, and apps for ebook readers.
22:53 to be precise: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bv_4sZCLlr0&t=1373
No, they are called metallophones, glockenspiel is just one of them. Other common metallophones are the tubular bells and the vibraphone
Yeah I don’t use PS just help others install it, neural filters is the new one
The new AI features require internet, and they are running on their servers, so it should affect those as well. They have a “generative fill” “neural filters” which adds features to your image, so they definitely needs your full image to generate something.
In cracked photoshop these tools are not working, obviously. So i guess if you use these cloud tools than you send your images directly to adobe hq.
Wikipedia has a long list about different language versions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dora_the_Explorer#Foreign_adaptations
Tldr: in non-english versions, usually the second language is English. Exceptions: Serbian and Irish teach Spanish, Kannada version teaches Hindi.
Check what is in the desktop file first. If the icon name is misspelled there, it won’t work with any icon pack ever.
I know how this works because the same happened to me with Thunderbird, at some release they changed the icon name in the desktop file, but it wasn’t updated in my icon packs, I expect something similar here as well. Without checking this you can’t be sure who’s fault is this, but I guess the app’s developers or maintainers messed up their desktop file some way.
Gnome reads the icon name from the desktop file. You have to find the desktop file of this app, check its icon name there, and make sure there is a similarly named icon available in the icon pack.
To find the desktop file: open Looking Glass (Alt+F2 -> type lg
Enter-> click Windows on the top right) you should see your open windows there, it should show the name of the desktop file, even if you started from terminal. You can find the desktop file in ~/.local/share/applications
or in /usr/share/applications
. Open the file, and you should see a line starting with Icon
, this is what Gnome reads.
To check if a similarly named icon exists search for that name in /usr/share/icons/
. If you can’t find a named icon, than the problem is in your icon pack, you should open an issue there. If you want to change the icon to something else, change the line in the desktop file.
More info in the glorious Arch Wiki: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Desktop_entries
You can create a new desktop file, where you add pkexec in the Exec
line.
Desktop files are in /usr/share/applications
. Find your app there. Copy it’s desktop file file to the user’s application directory, it’s ~/.local/share/applications
expanded: /home/username/.local/share/applications/
. Rename this new desktop file, and in the line starting with Exec
add pkexec
at the beginning of the command string. pkexec
is the graphical equivalent of sudo
(kindof). Also change the Name
in the file, so you can find it in your menu. (The difference you mention comes from here. On the gui this Name
parameter is visible, while on the terminal you call the command from Exec
).
When you save the new desktop file, it should show up in your Application menu. If you start this new app, pkexec should bring up a graphical password prompt.
If you use gnome you can edit desktop files with alacarte, it may work with other DEs: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/alacarte
More info, these things are unrelated to your distro, it should work the same way everywhere:
Can you open
about:processes
?